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Barbara Boxer on the fight to let women use the congressional gym

November 18, 2012 | 4:36 pm
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Photo - PALM SPRINGS, CA - JANUARY 07:  US Senator Barbara Boxer arrives at the 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Gala at Palm Springs Convention Center on January 7, 2012 in Palm Springs, California.  (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)
PALM SPRINGS, CA - JANUARY 07: US Senator Barbara Boxer arrives at the 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Gala at Palm Springs Convention Center on January 7, 2012 in Palm Springs, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Now that women hold a record-high 20 seats in the Senate, Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., reflected to NPR on how Congress has changed in her decades in office.

"It was lonely in the House," Boxer said, "because there was an attitude back in the '80s that was not the attitude now." In addition to "humiliating" jokes by her male colleagues, she was not permitted to use the gym. Boxer wrote a jingle in protest: "Exercise, glamorize, where to go, will you advise? Can't everybody use your gym? ... Equal rights, we'll wear tights, let's avoid those macho fights."

Things were different in the '90s Senate though.

"By the time I got to the Senate, Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., had shaped them up over here," Boxer said. "They knew they better fall in line."

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