Rep. Martha Roby (R-Alabama) is one of just 13 Republican women in the U.S. House of Representatives, and the second to announce her intention to retire.
Rep. Susan Brooks (R-Ind.), the recruitment chair for the National Republican Congressional Committee, said in June she would not seek reelection in 2020.
Roby’s departure signals another blow to the GOP, which is experiencing a 25-year low in female Repubicans in the House.
I'd like to see 50-50 women-men in Congress, regardless of party affiliation. Why be happier about a man staying in office, vs a woman???
If these Rs who find working with a rogue president so distasteful that they'd rather retire than put up with him for another term would speak out publicly instead of just quietly walking away they'd be making a much more powerful statement.
But that would require principles and a backbone, things many politicians don't have.
A 25 year low in female representation in the house?
Kinda of funny what you get when misogyny is one of the main planks in your party’s platform!
It's a 25 year-low of Republican women in the House.
A party that can't keep women on board will give liberals the upper hand during an election.
If that scum wins 2020 (which he won't), fewer women is a bad thing.
@Athena fewer repub women is not a bad thing at all. They are pretty much useless anyway as they don't stand for anything.
She is from Alabama so she will be replaced by an ultra conservative white man.
Not necessarily. Hope springs eternal.
@LiterateHiker I consider myself to be a very optimistic man, but this is Alabama, the state that almost elected Roy Moore two years ago. I will remain hopeful.