Politics in the early days of our republic was much as it is today. It was often dirty and dishonest; it was a place for ambitious self-promotion. But whereas today some of our most electric politicians are women — Michele Bachmann, Sarah Palin, Nancy Pelosi — our infant nation’s rigid gender roles held little tolerance for women who might wish to sully themselves in the public arena. For women — the intelligent and ambitious especially — their sphere of political influence was understood to reside within the home.
Still, women helped sustain the new republic through their roles as wives and mothers, securing a new social order in which liberty and the public good were the objectives, by ensuring that their husbands adhered to and their children were raised with republican principles. Historian Linda Kerber, in her famous 1976 essay in The American Quarterly, described this female civic participation as “Republican Motherhood”:
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The Republican Mother’s life was dedicated to the service of civic virtue; she educated her sons for it; she condemned and corrected her husband’s lapses from it. . . . The theorists [of the early republic] created a mother who had a political purpose and argued that her domestic behavior had a direct political function in the republic.
Traditional republican motherhood — in which women served on the sidelines as political and moral compasses for men — is clearly obsolete. Today, instead, we see a new kind of republican motherhood emerging. And in the year of the big-R Republican woman, Michele Bachmann just might be its matriarch.
The goals of modern republican mothers are broadly similar to those of the original ones: to foster a relationship between citizen and state in which the citizen is sovereign over government. But whereas the republican mother of our Founding era participated in politics only indirectly, the new republican mother plays a decidedly active role in our public life. Gender has been not overcome, but integrated.
Bachmann joined Congress only in 2007, but she quickly gained national recognition first as a firebrand and then as a darling of the Tea Party movement. Her decision to strike a path outside the party apparatus — giving her own response to President Obama’s State of the Union address, for instance — has prompted criticism. But she managed to leverage her standing with the Tea Party into an official leadership position by establishing the Tea Party Caucus in the House. And an unsuccessful run for chair of the House Republican Conference helped sharpen her name recognition and made clear her national aspirations.
Compared to other GOP candidates such as Governors Romney and Pawlenty, Bachmann does not have a substantial political résumé. And yet her experience, bolstered by her educational accomplishments, defines her departure from her 18th-century female forebears. Bachmann holds a J.D. from Oral Roberts University and an LL.M. in tax law from William & Mary School of Law, and she practiced law for five years for the IRS before choosing to be a full-time mother.
The republican motherhood of our Founding era was significant only in part because it gave women — to borrow a phrase from the Left — agency, or an opportunity to influence civic life. What was unique about republican motherhood — and fundamentally more important — was the set of ideals women helped advance. And this is where Bachmann can differentiate herself from her opponents — many of whom are unsteady at best on the principles of constitutionally limited government — and fashion herself the new republican mother.
At the time of the Founding, Republican motherhood was not simply an act of domesticity; it would not have been Republican motherhood without the principles it represented. When most citizens still expected the American experiment to fail, the ideals of republicanism — manifested in the Constitution — were the measure of the country’s success. And it was the mother who kept her husband and her sons focused on liberty and civic virtue.
On Monday, when Bachmann pledged her allegiance to “the Founding Fathers’ vision of a limited government that trusts in and perceives the unlimited potential of you, the American people,” she was clearly not seeking to steer the conscience only of her husband and her sons. Instead, she was attempting to focus the Americanpublic on those values and ideas central to our nation’s success.
What’s more, Bachmann — who has five children of her own, sheltered 23 foster children, and started a charter school — remains a viscerally maternal figure. But she has also, and without awkwardness, embarrassment, or gender anxiety, embraced the traditional role of the republican father.
Bachmann still needs to grapple with a number of potential liabilities, from startling statements — most recently, confusing the towns in Iowa where John Wayne and John Wayne Gacy had lived — to a social conservatism that worries voters of a libertarian stripe.
But it is clear that the traditionalism infused with classical liberalism that is peculiar to America has transcended in deep and important ways our modern gender wars. We are sure to see much more of the new republican mother in the years to come.
— Sabrina L. Schaeffer is a senior fellow with the Independent Women’s Forum and managing partner of Evolving Strategies.
"LL.M. in tax law from William & Mary School of Law,"
For someone who lived literally across the street from Colonial Williamsburg and a 5 minute drive to Yorktown and Jamestown, Bachmann's gaffes are inexcusable. I guess she never bothered to listen to the great cast members at Colonial Williams who forget more about that period then I will ever know. All she had to do was ask a chap playing Thomas Jefferson and she would of known the Founding Fathers did not work tirelessly to end slavery
This is an excellent piece. Fellow comment authors might try actually reading a history book. It is not the "ovaries" here, it is the strength of character and achievement that Michele brings to the race. Haven't we tried an empty man for President? Bet that's who these snarky writers voted for. Afraid of the girl? We'll see.
Bachmann is worrisome to me because the biggest thing I take away from her speeches and ads are that she is against abortion and has five kids...and, she was a hired gun for the IRS (as indicated in this piece) for five years. Most real conservatives would not have done that, and she seems to think it is something to be proud of. I have not heard a single word from her regarding her position on the income tax vs a consumption tax. Until I do, my vote goes elsewhere.
Yes, Michele Bachmann's gaffs are well known and problematic. But, the current occupant of the White House doesn't remember if the soldiers that he has awarded the Medal Of Honor to were still breathing at the time. Amazing how that never got reported. Face it, the media HATES her almost as much as they despise Sarah Palin.
How insulting. Because she's a woman, she's a GOP or Republican mother? We don't need a mommy or a daddy, we need a president. NRO is a disgrace. Luckily NR and its establishment condescension are increasingly irrelevant.
Whenever people make a huge deal about a candidate's race, gender, or sexual orientation, you can bet it's because the candidate has failed to achieve anything of significance.
And, no, Julie Weber, I didn't vote for the current Narcissist-in-Chief. I don't vote for candidates based on race, sexual orientation, or anatomical characteristics.
She's also a hardcore creationist who will kill science education in this country if she gets in. The GOP desperately needs to find a scientifically literate candidate who isn't a hopeless RINO.
I loved this article, all the way up to the end when the author mentioned the media-manufacture John Wayne thing again. I love American women's history and Republican Motherhood is one of my favorite stories from it. Why detract from that with the John Wayne lie? Why buy it (as the author obviously did)?
Look, to believe the headlines and the author's commentary, one has to believe that Bachmann:
1. Knew who John Wayne Gacy was; unlikely in any event.
2. Knew he was born in Waterloo, IA; entirely improbable.
3. Was deliberately referring to Gacy, or the facts of his biography; a malicious bold-faced lie.
It is only under those conditions that she could "confuse" anything John Wayne with John Wayne Gacy. Logic alone dispels this lie. If anything, she merely said the wrong town, and even that is called into question if you know anything about John Wayne's actual history.
We are going to have a robust campaign, and the best man or woman running will win the nomination. There will be plenty of debates between now and the Iowa and NH contests to sort the wheat from the chaff.
Bachmann strikes me as the candidate who has improved the most since I first heard her on the radio back during the 2008 financial crisis. Her family history (5 natural + 23 foster children) is important only in that it shows that she is capable of hard work and discipline, and she has ample reason to care about future generations. I am certainly willing to give her a chance to get my primary vote. And I will take her over Obama any day.
btw, I don't know how many people told me that they voted for Obama in 2008 because of his perfect family as compared to McCain. When you are entrusting someone with the power to destroy the world, these considerations do matter to lots of voters.