Women have heard the refrain for decades: To be female is to be inherently too emotional to effectively lead. Women, according to this historical trope, do not have the temperament needed to command respect and stay calm under pressure.
Counterpoint: the recent embarrassing behavior of male lawmakers in the United States Congress. On Tuesday, two equally contentious moments on Capitol Hill once again highlighted the ludicrous nature of this sexist stereotype while also positing a new question: Perhaps it is men who are too emotional?
Women have heard the refrain for decades: To be female is to be inherently too emotional to effectively lead.
First, there was the alleged physical altercation between Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., and former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. Burchett accused McCarthy of elbowing him in the back, unprovoked, during a conversation with journalists in a Capitol hallway.
“It was just a cheap shot by a bully,” Burchett told the media later. “And then I chased after him.”
McCarthy denied elbowing Burchett, though the confrontation was witnessed by a congressional correspondent for NPR. This is also not the first time McCarthy has been accused of physical confrontation; in his book, former GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger accused McCarthy of something similar, twice.
Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., a man not exactly known for keeping his cool, has since filed an ethics complaint against McCarthy over the alleged “assault.”
Meanwhile in the Senate, a hearing of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee almost ended in violence after Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma challenged the president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Sean O’Brien, to a literal fistfight.
In a social media post this summer, O’Brien had called Mullin a “clown” and a “fraud” before threatening to fight him “anyplace, anytime.” Mullin said the committee hearing room was “a time” and “a place.”
“OK, that’s fine. Perfect,” O’Brien responded. “Stand your butt up then,” Mullin said, before rising from his seat and seemingly preparing to remove his wedding band. Thankfully, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont was there to force Mullin back to reality.
The internet certainly had fun roasting this latest batch of temperamental tantrum-throwers.
And yet, according to one 2019 study from Georgetown University, an estimated 1 in 8 Americans still think women are “less emotionally suited to run for political office.” That’s a dramatic improvement over 1975 numbers, but still a significant enough percentage to swing elections.
In 2000, then-Stanford University student John Gibbs founded a “think tank” that argued women did not possess “the characteristics necessary to govern,” adding that men are more likely to “think logically about broad and abstract ideas in order to deduce a suitable conclusion, without relying upon emotional reasoning.”








