26 September 2023

Women in Congress more likely to be interrupted

Start the conversation

Elaine Justice* says research has found that women in the United State’s Congress are significantly more likely to be interrupted than men during congressional committee hearings, researchers report.


Committee hearings are where most business in Congress is done—especially in Senate committees, where women are about 10 per cent more likely to be interrupted, according to new findings in American Political Science Review.

Perhaps more strikingly, women are more than twice as likely as men to be interrupted in congressional hearings when discussing women’s issues, including reproductive rights, abortion, and child care.

“According to our data, women fight through interruption by their colleagues for a full eight to 10 minutes of hearing time. Men fight through significantly less,” says Joe Sutherland, visiting assistant professor of quantitative theory and methods at Emory University and corresponding author of the paper.

“Women in Congress can encounter greater difficulty in getting their ideas across, because they’re being interrupted—especially in policy areas including women’s issues, where they can advocate powerfully on behalf of their constituents,” he says.

Sutherland and Michael G. Miller, assistant professor of political science at Barnard College, examined speech patterns from more than 24,000 congressional committee hearings from 1994 to 2018.

Using natural language processing techniques, the team analysed 24 million lines of speech—a project that would have been much too labour-intensive without using the latest computing techniques to examine the massive sets of data.

“With natural language processing, we’re able to address data on a much larger scale and ask questions in a more productive way than before,” Sutherland says.

“If you’ve ever watched a congressional hearing, you know members interrupt each other a lot.

“But this is the first statistical evidence we have, because research at this scale was until only recently too cost-prohibitive and time intensive to complete.”

What are the societal implications of women being interrupted at higher rates?

“We were surprised to find that women face greater interruption in the Senate.

The Senate has a reputation as the world’s most venerated deliberative body,” Sutherland says.

“Future research should consider looking into our other institutions, such as the US Supreme Court, where women’s issues are at the forefront.”

*Elaine Justice, Senior Director, Enterprise Communications at Emory University.

This article first appeared at news.emory.edu.

Start the conversation

Be among the first to get all the Public Sector and Defence news and views that matter.

Subscribe now and receive the latest news, delivered free to your inbox.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.