She recalled how the country was unified after World War II, when politicians shared a sense of common purpose.
“The enemy was not the guy across the aisle, it was the dictator across the sea,” she said. “They had literally been in the trenches together. They ran as the men who went, not the men who sent.”
She recalled a conversation she had with President George W. Bush, as they were heading to meet the Pope at Andrews Air Force Base, when she pressed him on immigration.
“He said, ‘Cokie, I tried and tried and tried to get my party to do the right thing on immigration, but I couldn’t because of the way district lines are drawn. They are afraid to lose,’” Roberts recalled President Bush saying.
“It is a poisoning part of our politics because it makes compromise almost impossible,” Roberts said.
Women: “The last bastion of bipartisanship”
“So how do we fix this?” she posed. “We know it helps to elect women,” to which the audience applauded.
She said the women in the Senate have a monthly dinner during which they work on moving legislation forward.
“Women in the Senate are the last bastion of bipartisanship,” said Roberts. “We know that women tend to be less ideological and more pragmatic and more willing to cross the aisle.”
Roberts, who has written several books about women who have influenced U.S. history, praised Lesley University founder Edith Lesley, a visionary who recognized the importance of early childhood education and educating the educators.
“Lesley is a fabulous institution with a storied history,” said Roberts, who read aloud the Lesley mission statement, after which she exclaimed, “Yes!”
Roberts hailed women throughout her talk and called on more women to run for office. She said she fears there will be a backlash against women in response to the surge of sexual assault and harassment allegations that are surfacing in halls of power across the country – “almost a daily revelation.”
“There are a lot of scared people on Capitol Hill,” said Roberts. “They know they need to clean up their act.”
Roberts recalled her own encounters with harassment.
“We were all sexually harassed,” she said. “It was absolutely routine. ... At dinners, a senator would sit there with his hand on your knee and you constantly put it back.”
Roberts joked with moderator and WGBH personality Jared Bowen, “If you don’t watch out, you may be the last man standing in public radio.”
The danger of questioning facts
At the close of her lecture, Roberts fielded audience questions read by Bowen, which ranged from queries about North Korea and Melania Trump, to whether she chimes in on NPR’s “Morning Edition” while in her pajamas in her kitchen (“No the kitchen; Yes the pajamas,” she quipped, eliciting roars of laughter).
She told the audience that her greatest concern, by far, is the questioning of facts.
“There’s been a deterioration of discourse. Most serious is this questioning of fact,” said Roberts. “If you can’t agree on facts being facts, I don’t know where you go from there. The idea to question something palpably true is discomforting, to put it mildly – and dangerous.”
When asked whether the country should abandon the Electoral College, Roberts said a country as large as the U.S. needs the college to give power to minorities, including black, Hispanic and Jewish voters, she said.
“The founders, who had just come out of a monarchy, were very concerned about tyranny of the majority,” said Roberts. “They were very concerned about protecting minorities.”
She said that she believes Melania Trump is “trying very hard to be First Lady in all the right ways,” but it’s unclear whether she has her husband’s ear or any ability to influence him.
“In most of history, the First Lady has been the most powerful woman in the country because she had the ear of the most powerful man,” said Roberts.
Roberts believes it’s likely that Alabama voters will elect embattled Senate candidate Roy Moore, and that the odds of tax reform passing are “high” out of desperation to get something passed. “I think they’ll pass it, and they’ll regret it.”
“(Moore) has taken a leaf out of the Trump book: Just deny, deny, deny and keep moving,” she said of the allegations of child molestation and sexual misconduct leveled against Moore.
Roberts assured the audience that Americans will weather these times, as they have always done.
“We have lived through many times in the past and we will live through this one, but it will be very interesting to see how we do it.”