The relative lack of women involved in Donald Trump’s transition comes after Trump faced scrutiny during the campaign for his treatment of women. | AP Photo Trump's transition team: Binders with few women

There are seven people leading the executive committee for President Elect Donald Trump’s transition team. Zero of them are women.

The dearth of women is not a rarity among Trump’s transition hires to date. Of the 79 people listed thus far on four separate Trump transition staff teams or advisory groups, women account for 19 — or about 21 percent.

The gender contrast is most stark at the top of the executive committee, which as of Friday is led by Vice President elect Mike Pence. The committee includes six other vice chairs: New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Dr. Ben Carson, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions.

But it’s part of a pattern that extends throughout the transition team’s hires thus far. Beyond Pence and his 6 vice chairman, Trump’s team announced 16 other members of the executive committee. Four of them are women, including Trump’s daughter, Ivanka.

Then there are the teams tasked with managing Trump’s promised policy transformation. According to an organization chart obtained by POLITICO, of 14 point-people to look after policy priorities as leads, two are women: Danielle Cutrona, counsel to Sen. Jeff Sessions on the Judiciary Committee, is in charge of “Immigration Reform & Building the Wall;” and Paula Stannard, a lawyer at Alston & Bird who was deputy general counsel and acting general counsel of the Department of Health and Human Services, has been tasked with health care reform.

Another organizational chart obtained by POLITICO includes 34 people tasked with overseeing various policy areas, departments and agencies. Eight are women.

Women do represent nearly half of the Trump’s transition’s senior staff, three of the eight announced positions. That includes Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s campaign manager who will serve as a senior adviser; Hope Hicks, Trump’s campaign spokeswoman who will serve as national press secretary, and Katie Walsh, who will serve as a senior adviser.

Trump’s transition team did not respond to a request for comment.

The relative lack of women involved in Trump’s transition comes after Trump faced scrutiny during the campaign for his treatment of women. Hillary Clinton and other Democrats focused on Trump’s behavior with women, particularly after the Access Hollywood tape was released and after nearly a dozen women came forward accusing Trump of varying degrees of sexual misconduct.