Ahh, hahahahahahahaha:
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/01/12/114th-congress-is-most-diverse-ever/ The increasing number of minorities in Congress is due almost entirely to membership changes in the House, where today 85 of 435 (20%) members are non-white, according to CQ Roll Call. In 2001, there were 60 minorities in the House. By comparison, in the Senate, just six of 100 senators now belong to a racial or ethnic minority group, up from three senators in 2001.
The increase in the number of minorities in the House since 2001 has largely come among newly elected Democrats, though Republicans have also made some gains. Since 2001, the number of House Democrats who are minorities increased by 18, from 56 then to 74 now. By comparison, there was an increase of seven representatives among House Republicans over the same period, rising from four then to 11 now.
[Democrats 74, Republicans 11]
Ohh, hohohohohohohoho:
https://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R43869.pdf Female Members
A record 108 women (20% of the total membership) serve in the 114th Congress as of January 2015, 7 more than at the beginning of the 113th Congress. Eighty-eight women, including 4 Delegates, serve in the House and 20 in the Senate. Of the 88 women in the House, 65 are Democrats, including 3 of the Delegates, and 23 are Republicans, including 1 Delegate. Of the 20 women in the Senate, 14 are Democrats and 6 are Republicans.
[Democrats 65, Republicans 23]
*wipes tears from eyes* Oh, my sides...
Hey, at least the Republicans are *becoming* more diverse than they used to be, even if they aren't *actually* more diverse than the Democrats, not by a long shot.
A neat pie chart from this article (
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/breakdown-114th-congress-demographics-gender), based on the data above, appropriately titled
"CHART: Actually, Most Of The Diversity In Congress Comes From Democrats":
http://a5.img.talkingpointsmemo.com/image/upload/w_652/glfam5rxjeqrm1tztmim.jpg
Nail in coffin:
To be fair you may be right on this from a numerical standpoint, but that was never what I was advocating for. I was only comparing the diversity within the presidential candidate pools ...
Well, except for when you said this:
The only problem they're facing now is that their party is more and more being led by old white dudes (Dick Durban, Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer)
And the reality is that you're just cherry picking 'leadership' positions to suit your agenda. Here are some Democrat leaders who are not white males: Nancy Pelosi (House Minority Leader), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Chair of the DNC, incumbent), Donna Brazile (Chair of the DNC, acting), Tulsi Gabbard (vice-chair of DNC), Maria Durazo (vice chair of DNC), Kyrsten Sinema (chief deputy whip), Diana DeGette (chief deputy whip), John Lewis (senior chief deputy whip), Jan Schakowsky (chief deputy whip), Keith Ellison (chief deputy whip), Terri Sewell (chief deputy whip), Joaquín Castro (chief deputy whip), Patty Murray (Secretary, SDC), Elizabeth Warren (Strategic Policy Advisor, SDC), Willie Wilson (Presidential Candidate for 2016 on ballot in Illinois), Dianne Feinstein (vice chair, Select Committee on Intelligence)
All their "diversity" is stuck in the House of Representatives and they have no chance of getting high enough up on the Democratic White Ladder to get a shot at being in a more powerful office.
As you can see, your claim here is a crock of shit.
Let me put it to you this way: You must have gotten the idea that the Republicans are super-diverse and the Democrats are all old white men from somewhere. Think about it. Wherever you got that idea from ... was a source of false information (and that's putting it mildly). Think about that. Do you really want your mind poisoned by false information?
Demonstrably false information.
An interesting article with some points that haven't been raised in this thread yet:
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2015/11/why_gop_diversity_won_t_matter_to_minority_voters.html
Edited 2/20/2016 11:27:06