Gender yields no extra credit

Gov. Beverly Perdue has no special status among the state's female voters.

After a News & Observer story examined the relative few women serving high positions within Perdue's administration, Public Policy Polling's Tom Jensen noted that Perdue didn't get extra support from Republican or independent women in her election.

The Democratic firm looked at exit polls to determine that she earned a smaller percentage of the female vote than President Barack Obama and Sen. Kay Hagan

Perdue, despite her status as the state's first female Governor, has no unique appeal to women voters. She got few, if any, extra votes last fall from Republicans or independent women who wanted a woman in that office. Folks who would normally have voted Republican still did. And women aren't cutting Perdue any slack for the issues she's had during her first eight months as Governor, evaluating her more or less the same way men are.

Laws could some day be gender-neutral

The House approved Monday night a bill ordering a commission to study making the state laws and constitution gender-neutral.

The General Statutes Commission, an advisory panel of law experts, would study what it would take to take the "he" out of the state's laws. Rep. Deborah Ross, a Raleigh Democrat, said the usual solution would be to use titles, such as "governor" rather than changing the text to read "he or she."

"The governor is referred to as 'he' throughout the entire constitution," Ross said. "The governor is female right now."

Rep. George Cleveland, a Jacksonville Republican, said he was not a big fan of political correctness, but his real objection was over making any changes to the state constitution.

"I have no problem with the female race whatsoever. I might be chauvinistic in a lot of ways," Cleveland said. "I have learned in my life that there are a lot of very intelligent, competent females who could lead me around by the nose...I have no problem with a female governor. I have no problem with a male governor. My problem is I want them all to be competent to lead our state."

Ross said the statutes commission does its work without compensation. And, she advised her House colleagues, the group is a big fan of multiple drafts and revision. The changes proposed in the law could take years to study.

An existing state law already says that any reference to a "he" should be read as "he or she" for legal purposes.

The bill, which was sponsored by Cary Republican Sen. Richard Stevens cleared the House 79-33. It now goes to the governor for a signature. It was not immediately known whether she would sign it.

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