blicans have never had a female ranking member on the full committee.

The Trailblazers

When California Republican Rep. Florence Kahn was first named to the panel in 1933, she helped secure federal funding for construction of the Golden Gate and Bay bridges as well as expanding military installations in the Bay Area. As one of the very few women in Congress at the time, Kahn said “women in political office must remember her responsibility toward other women.”

Kahn went on to help establish pensions for Army nurses, voice frustration with the low pay of female government employees and create a program to honor mothers of deceased soldiers. She advocated for women’s involvement in politics and government. And she encouraged Republicans to bring more women into their ranks.

“We can’t let the majority be so indifferent that we will be ruled by a minority. Women must be made to realize the importance of their voice,” Kahn said in a 1939 interview.

Kahn left Congress in 1936. Another woman wouldn’t be named to the committee until 1963.

The number of women on the Appropriations Committee remained low through the 1980s as women worked to gain traction in American government.

Democrat Marcy Kaptur of Ohio first joined the panel in 1989. The only other women on the 59-member committee were Lindy Boggs, a Louisiana Democrat, and Virginia Smith, a Nebraska Republican. Women also continued to be underrepresented in Congress, with 25 women in the 435-member House and two in the 100-member Senate during the 101st Congress (1989-90).

Kaptur didn’t have an easy time getting named to the committee during her three previous sessions in Congress. During her first hearing, Boggs invited Kaptur to sit with her and explained to her the practices and procedures of the committee.

“She adopted me and I truly appreciate that,” Kaptur says.

In the 29 years since, Kaptur says the committee has changed dramatically as the number of women grew and as they became their party’s top voice on subcommittees.

“It’s much more open. It’s much less stuffy and inbred,” Kaptur says. “It was very daunting to walk into a committee when you have close to 60 people and you’re one of three and you’re the youngest one.”

Two years after Kaptur was first named to the committee, Democrat Nancy Pelosi of California joined. Then, in 1993 a handful of new women, including Lowey and Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, joined the panel, bringing the total number of women to seven out of 60.

In her first few years on the committee, DeLauro says that she, Pelosi and Lowey were referred to as the “DeLoSis” (pronounced like “Pelosi”). She said the trio became known for “fighting for women’s health,” including getting women included in clinical trials, establishing a women’s bureau at the National Institutes of Health, directing funding to breast cancer research and advocating for a full range of family planning options.

“It was a male-dominated committee until the 90s and now you’ve had a major turnover and that has a serious impact on the direction of the agenda and the issues that are taken up,” DeLauro says. “The agenda changed on the Appropriations Committee as well as everywhere else when there was an increasing number of women.”

Throughout her time on the committee, DeLauro says women have mastered the policy areas they cover to ensure male colleagues know they belong.

“You’re always being watched to see whether or not you know what you’re talking about,” DeLauro says. “I think men have an easier time of that than women do. And I think that is still true.”

Power Play

On the Senate side of the Capitol, women’s inclusion in spending decisions and the chamber as a whole followed a similarly slow pace.

Maine Republican Margaret Chase Smith became the first woman on the Appropriations Committee in 1953. After her departure from Congress in 1972, the panel returned to a male-only committee until 1987, when Barbara A. Mikulski began a tenure that would eventually make her the Senate’s first appropriations chairwoman.

The Maryland Democrat — at the time one of two women in the Senate — says she pursued a seat on Appropriations because it was a “power committee.” She enlisted the help of fellow Marylander Sen. Paul Sarbanes and Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy to earn that spot. And Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia became her teacher and mentor. 

Early achievements, she says, included funding for breast cancer research and ensuring that female veterans received the same level of care as male veterans.

“With the women coming, we were bolstering initiatives that were already underway. And we brought new thinking and new approaches,” Mikulski says. “These were insights and knowledge that they had not been exposed to before.”

Mikulski says some men were “more receptive than others” about the policy initiatives of female lawmakers.

“I did not ever run into hostility; what I ran into sometimes was an unknowing,” she says.

Two other Democratic women, Patty Murray of Washington and Dianne Feinstein of California, joined Mikulski on the committee in 1993. Both carved out areas where they could advance key policy areas important to women.

They’ve both witnessed the number of women on the committee rise from three of 29 during the 103rd Congress (1993-94) to eight of 31 during this session — a bump from 10 percent to 25 percent.

“Over time women have really earned their spurs,” Feinstein says. “I think we’ve become an effective force for women — for women’s rights in the country as well as for good government. And I say that regardless of party. And I think women are more interested in practical, workable solutions to a great extent.”

Gender Neutral

When Maine Republican Susan Collins joined the committee in 2009, there were 17 women in the entire Senate, seven of whom were on the Appropriations Committee. Collins says it’s important to have at least one female voice on each panel, because women provide “a perspective that might otherwise be lacking.” But, she rebuffed the notion that there are women’s issues.

“The women of the Senate span the ideological spectrum, so I always resist the idea that there are women’s issues, or that somehow issues of national defense or taxes don’t affect women as much as they do men,” Collins says. “I can’t think of very many, if any, issues in Appropriations, where the vote broke along gender lines. I can think of a lot where they broke along either regional or party lines — but not gender lines.”

Granger has similar views on her campaign to become the Republicans’ top appropriator. She doesn’t feel that having a woman leading the GOP side of the committee would significantly change policy. And she doesn’t want her gender to determine whether or not she gets the position.

“I just don’t see issues as male issues or female issues that way,” Granger says. “I would never expect to be elected to chair the full committee because I’m a woman. I just don’t want to be denied the position because I’m a woman or would be the first woman.”

Regardless of which party is in control during the next Congress, key issues impacting women as well as men will be front and center in both chambers come January.

Chief among them for appropriators will be negotiating a final two-year spending agreement to avoid a 2011 deficit reduction law lowering spending levels during fiscal 2020 and 2021.

And if the House gets a chairwoman and female ranking member on the same panel for the first time in more than 40 years, Granger and Lowey will have far more influence on policy and spending than their predecessors who led the Select Committee on the House Beauty Shop.