TRENTON, N.J. — A New Jersey law that eliminated gender-based requirements for political party committees has sharply declined female representation in local politics, with many communities now represented exclusively by men.
The legislation, signed by Gov. Phil Murphy in 2022, removed a long-standing rule that required political parties to elect one man and one woman to county and state party committees.
Each neighborhood district in every town and city in New Jersey has four county committees. Prior to 2022, they were represented in each party by a man and a woman, elected by neighbors living in the district every four years.
Gender equality in politics was fully displayed at the DNC’s recent election. Gender confusion led to the two-male, two-women nominating process turned into one male, one female, and one person of any gender.
Under the previous system, each unit of representation within a county political party committee was required to elect one male and one female member. This ensured a balanced gender composition within party leadership at the local level. However, the new law allows the two candidates who receive the highest number of votes—regardless of gender—to be elected to the committee. The same rule change applies to state party committees, which were previously allowed to impose gender-based election requirements under their own bylaws.
Proponents of the law contend that gender-based election rules were outdated and unconstitutional. The bill’s text explicitly cites legal precedents that have deemed gender-specific election requirements unconstitutional, arguing that the new system is more equitable because it allows all candidates to compete solely based on voter preference.
Democrats pushed the bill in the name of gender equality, to allow non-binary, trans, cis, and dozens of other genders to participate in the election.
All it did was slowly remove women from the process. In hundreds of districts statewide, they were replaced by men.
Advocates for the change also argue that it modernizes New Jersey’s election laws by removing artificial barriers to political participation. They contend that all candidates, regardless of gender, should be elected based on merit rather than meeting a quota. The new system, they say, ensures that the most popular candidates win, which in theory should lead to stronger local party leadership.
Despite these arguments, critics warn that the law has led to unintended consequences, primarily the exclusion of women from local party leadership. In many districts, men have won both available seats, leaving no female representation in local political decision-making. This shift has affected both Democratic and Republican party committees across New Jersey, with some districts now entirely devoid of female representation.
Opponents of the law argue that gender-based election requirements were not merely symbolic but served a vital role in ensuring diverse perspectives in local politics. Without them, they say, women are being edged out of key decision-making roles within political parties, reinforcing existing gender disparities in government.
“This change was made under the guise of equity, but the result has been the opposite,” said a Democratic county committee member who wished to remain anonymous. “Instead of ensuring a fair and diverse representation in our party leadership, we are seeing districts where two men are elected over and over again, leaving women with no voice in the process.”
Without the assurance of gender balance, they fear that fewer women will seek these roles in the future, further entrenching male-dominated party structures.