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Women
Win the Right to Vote
With war's end,
suffrage advocates stepped up their campaign for equal rights and
finally saw Congress pass the 19th Amendment giving women the right
to vote. Fearing that 200,000 new voters would disrupt Republican
control, Roraback urged Connecticut's Congressional delegation not
to support the amendment and rejected all calls for a special session
of the General Assembly to ratify it. Only after the necessary 36
states had already approved the amendment did Connecticut act. Picture
1
"It
would be better for the country if we could cut the vote we have
in two rather than add women to it."
Governor
Marcus Holcomb, 1919
Despite his
antagonism to suffrage, once women won the right to vote Roraback
sought to add them to the Republican electoral base. In 1920, three
Republican women won election to the House along with one Democrat
and an Independent. Four years later, Republican Alice Merritt became
the first female state senator. Picture
2
Roraback
ignored minority Democrats in the legislature. Important committee
assignments went to his trusted small town allies. The entire 1925
Appropriations Committee was made up of Republicans and included
no representatives from the state's five largest cities. Picture
3
"It's
one of those things that will spread. We'll give it to them and
then sometime in the future you'll have joint representation. And
don't forget the people elected Republicans to do the job!"
J.
Henry Roraback on the question of placing
Democrats on legislative committees
From his offices on the third floor of Hartford's Allyn House Hotel,
Roraback controlled executive and judicial appointments, nominations
for higher office, state appropriations and other actions of the
legislature. Picture
4
The
Roraback machine reached its peak in the election of 1926, virtually
driving the Democrats from the Senate and establishing an overwhelming
Republican majority in the House. Picture
5, 6
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