WASHINGTON -- The number of women seeking office in state legislatures declined over the last election cycle, continuing a 12-year pattern that women's advocates and political analysts say could quickly erode the unprecedented number of women in the 109th US Congress and accelerate a recent drop in the number of women holding statewide offices.
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"It is troubling to see this declining trend. If anything, the trend should be increasing," Snowe said. "It's the 21st century. I didn't expect it to be taking a U-turn."
Compared with the 1990s, specialists on women in politics say, the importance of national security issues and continued perceptions among some voters -- as well as some potential female candidates -- that women should be caring for their families have limited participation.
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Women comprise a record 14.8 percent of Congress, with 79 seats, and have risen to leadership positions in recent years. But analysts say no female challenger won a US Senate seat last year, and the percentage of women holding statewide elected office, such as governors, attorneys general, and US senators, has dropped since 1999, from 27.6 percent to 25 percent this year.
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/us_senate/articles/2005/01/30/regression_after_year_of_the_woman/?rss_id=Boston.com+%2F+News+%2F+Politics+%2F+Recent+Globe+coverage