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Palin not the only 'women's story' in this election

Have you ever seen a transformation this fast? In barely two months, the Barracuda became the Scapegoat. Think of it as evolution on steroids.

In September, Sarah Palin, the little-known governor of Alaska, was hailed as the great female hope of the Republican Party. Double the maverick, double the fun. John McCain called her "the most marvelous running mate in the history of this nation." Pro-life conservatives were "ecstatic," and she was a "hottie" to boot.

But after some disastrous interviews, after polls showed she was a drag on the ticket, and after, of course, losing the election, McCain staffers began dropping poison pellets. Sarah was a "diva." She was a Wasilla hillbilly looting Neiman Marcus. She didn't know a continent from a country.

Palin has always shown more moxie than substance. What she lacks in syntax, she makes up in self-confidence. Now Sarah Unbound is everywhere, serving the media moose chili and spin from her Anchorage crockpot. She's busily defending herself and her future: "If there's an open door ... then I'll plow through that door."

Well, a little door-check please. There was a quieter "women's story" that may make the doorway a little narrow.

Obama won the election with a bare majority of men: 49 percent to 48 percent. But he won with a landslide of votes from women: 56-43. Eight million more women than men voted for him.

In some of the battleground states, women made the difference. In New Hampshire, men split fairly evenly, but women chose Obama nearly 2-to-1. In North Carolina, men picked McCain 56-43 and women picked Obama 55-44.

There will be a record number of women serving in the Senate and House next year. But it's not exactly record-shattering. The percentage of women in both houses is a dismal 17. More to the point, three-quarters of those women are Democrats. Indeed, Susan Collins was re-elected in Maine this year as one of the last-standing moderate Republicans.

In the final breakthrough this year, the New Hampshire Senate became the first legislative body in the country with a majority of women. Nationally, the number of women state legislators barely crawled past the 24 percent mark.

This connection between women and the Democratic Party is as old as the gender gap itself. As Debbie Walsh of the Center for American Women in Politics explains, "The women's vote ends up being around economic issues and economic security. Women, as candidates and voters, are more likely to support a bigger role for government." It's not the gender, as they say, but the agenda.

Palin described the crowds at her rallies modestly in a sentence that defies diagraming: "But not me personally were those cheers for." Less modestly, but more coherently, she explained the defeat of the McCain-Palin ticket this way: "You know, we got that 'R' by our name."

So the other women's story of 2008 is that women voters and women officeholders are increasingly Democratic. That 'R' makes it hard to envision a door that a moose-hunting, pro-life, pit bull of a hockey mom can plow through.

What a year. For the first time, a woman - Hillary Clinton - became the establishment candidate. And voters wanted change. For the first time, the Republicans picked a woman - Sarah Palin - to energize the base. And the base kept shrinking.

Diva or not, Palin did change her corner of the landscape. Because of Palin, conservatives now speak of "sexism," the religious right describes teen pregnancy as a "challenge," and the culture warriors officially approve of working moms. For all that, what the heck, let her keep the clothes.

© 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

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