The American Political Leadership Project (2020-21)

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Cluster: 
Civic Engagement
Gov Lab Manager: 
Julia Cassidy
Research Associate: 
Dylan Gooding
Research Assistants: 
Kelly Austin, Leah Bartlett, Claire Brassil, Katie Butler, Evan Corn, Azalea Danes, Cameron Downey, Claire Fedor, Evan Fell, Dylan Gooding, Eleanor Griffiths, Maddie Holden, Alex Hunter, Lauren Krock, Naya Kurdy, Olivia Lattanzi, Giulia Matteucci, William McAlpine, Henry Morgan, Ryan Motto, Caitlin Mullooly, Kelly Mwaamba, Ryan Stratton, Nora Sweeney, Jillian Updegraff, Makaila Wilson, & Luke Woodward

What is the American Political Leadership Project?

​American women remain vastly under-represented in positions of political power, and researchers have argued that this representational deficit is partially due to a political candidacy gap. In this article, we investigate the importance of gender identity at a formative moment in the development of political ambition. More specifically, we contacted thousands of local party leaders, donors, and activists to solicit advice for one of two student clubs: one women’s group and one gender-nonspecific group. Our experiment suggests that overt gender identity can lead to greater guidance opportunities – particularly from Republican women. Moreover, while the advice offered to the women’s club was far more likely to be gendered, the advice given to this group did not include a greater emphasis on the challenges associated with a political career. These findings suggest that organizational gender identity can meaningfully affect political mentorship experiences and, ultimately, the candidate pipeline.
Over months of careful research, Gov Lab students constructed a novel sampling from 40,000+ verified emails of political donors, local party leaders from both major parties, and party activists from both major parties across all counties in the U.S.

Open-ended quotes from survey data:

  • “Don’t think that you have to know everything to run for office, or serve in public office. Many women won’t step up to campaign because they think they have to be experts on (fill in the blank). Men have no such misgivings.”
  • “I think it is very important that women run for public office. They might have to work twice as hard to win but it would be worth it.”