
Most American women didn’t win the right to vote until the
ratification of the 19th amendment in 1920, but the first female
candidate for president came nearly 50 years earlier. In 1872, Ohio
native Victoria Woodhull made history when she ran as the Equal Rights
Party candidate against incumbent President Ulysses S. Grant. Her
platform included such progressive reforms as an eight-hour workday,
women’s suffrage and an end to the death penalty, and she rounded out
the groundbreaking ticket by selecting abolitionist Frederick Douglass
as her running mate (though apparently without his permission). Woodhull
was something of a pioneer even before she launched her bid to shatter
the political glass ceiling. She’d spoken before Congress regarding
equal voting rights, and had opened the first woman-owned brokerage firm
on Wall Street. Woodhull failed to score any electoral votes on
Election Day, and there’s no record of how she fared in the popular
vote. Even if she had won, she would have been barred from taking up
residence in the White House—though not because of her gender. The
Constitution requires that presidents be at least 35 years old upon
their inauguration. Woodhull would have been just 34.
In the years since Woodhull’s trailblazing campaign, dozens of other
women have made bids for the presidency. Despite not being able to vote
for herself, suffragette Belva Ann Lockwood garnered 4,149 votes in
1884. Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith later won 227,007 votes in the
1964 Republican primary, but fell short of the getting the nomination.
Eight years later, Congresswoman Shirley Chisolm was the first woman—and
the first African American—to seek the Democratic nomination. Lenora
Fulani became the first woman to get on the ballot in all 50 states when
she ran as a third party candidate in 1988, and Hillary Clinton later
achieved the best ever showing by a woman in a primary in 2008. To date,
the most successful female candidate in the general election is the
Green Party’s Jill Stein, who netted over 450,000 votes in 2012.
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