Friday, November 9, 2007

Susan Faludi on Hillary Clinton


Male politicians have always cast themselves as rescuers to women. Clinton's also playing a rescuer -- but as a feminist!











Susan Faludi: Hillary Plays the Winning Gender Card:


No sooner had Hillary Clinton proceeded from the Democratic presidential debate to a speech at Wellesley College last week than the wailing began. Barack Obama hit the "Today" show accusing her of playing the gender card, and a chorus line of media pundits denounced her for having hurt the cause of feminism by acting the part of the injured girl.

New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd contended that Clinton was trying to show
she can break, just like a little girl. ... If she could become a senator by playing the victim after Monica, surely she can become president by playing the victim now.
Fox News' Mort Kondracke preached:
I think it is very unattractive for a general election candidate, who wants to be the commander in chief of the free world, to be saying, 'They're ganging up on me!' I mean, this is the NFL. This is not Wellesley versus Smith in field hockey.
Yet these indictments were conjured from the slimmest of evidence. What Clinton actually said at her alma mater before a whooping and roaring crowd of more than 1,000 young women was:
In so many ways, this all-women's college prepared me to compete in the all-boys' club of presidential politics. ... Fear is always with us, but we just don't have time for it, not now. So let's roll up our sleeves and get to work together. We're ready to shatter that highest glass ceiling.
What about that was so girl-with-her-finger-in-her-mouth frail?

The fact is, Clinton's opponents are mad because they feel robbed. Clinton hadn't acted the victim. The gender card she played was the one every successful recent male presidential candidate has played -- the rescuer card.

. . . .This year, as always, the presidential candidates must contend with the rescue formula, complicated by the fact that Bush has so devalued its currency. In this climate, Hillary Clinton can do what her male counterparts cannot. She is, indeed, reaching for the gender card, as her accusers claim. It's just different from the one they imagine. She is auditioning for the role of rescuer on a feminist frontier.

She returned to Wellesley to tell female undergraduates that she was there to free them; she was there to help them "roll up our sleeves" and "shatter that highest glass ceiling." As such, she latched onto a crucial element of presidential races past, and possibly to come -- that at the core of all American political rescue fantasies is a young woman in need.

In the general election, whoever the candidates may be, they will be tempted, perhaps required, to show just those bona fides. Clinton may be the only one who can do so without betraying the signature of a disgraced cowboy ethic.

10 comments:

  1. She's going to do it! I don't agree with her approach to a lot of issues, but I want to see that glass ceiling smashed to pieces.

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  2. The press, led by Hillary-hater Tim Russert, is going to try their best to destroy her.

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  3. Hillary Clinton is our only hope to take back America and get it under control. God help us all if someone else wins. I got $35 in the bank that says Hillary is the best candidate. You can count on it.

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  4. Back a week or so, I clipped this paragraph from
    George Packer writing in the New Yorker on BHO & HRC:

    Two months ago, I wrote that Obama, with his veneer of idealism and his pragmatic core, reminded me a bit of J.F.K. That might have been wrong. Since then, it’s become clear that Obama is not “a devious and, if necessary, ruthless man,” as Schlesinger called Kennedy. Democrats drawn to Obama's camp project onto him the sense of politics as a higher calling that Stevenson pioneered in the early nineteen-fifties (whether there’s much substance to it in Obama isn’t completely clear). In the American liberal tradition, this means almost certain defeat. Clinton, on the other hand, appeals to those liberals who want to sleep with power and its compromises and have made their peace with it. For this reason, she will always be despised by a significant minority of people on her side of the partisan line, in addition to everyone on the other side.

    As an Obama partisan, of course, I don't agree that my candidate is a certain loser. And when we think of Adlai Stevenson walking among us in the contemporary scene, I think most people would think of (the old) Al Gore.

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  5. The knock on HRC is that she is ducking the hard questions. Well good. It's smart to do so. Especially in the longest, most over-exposed pre-primary season in history. All of her desperate pandering opponents are reaching for straws out on the ends of various limbs, it's good that one Democrat is playing it safe. The GOP is racking up one hell of a paper trail. You know the finals is going to rank among the dirtiest of the dirty.

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  6. You know the finals is going to rank among the dirtiest of the dirty.

    It's going to be a nasty, vicious battle... I hope the Republican candidate gets completely reamed by whoever we nominate!

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  7. The worst case (and most likely scenario): Clinton vs. Giuliani, and Giuliani trounces her. Another 4 years of the 'Pubs. More of the same.

    Go Obama!!!

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  8. I see no qualitative difference between Clinton's candidacy and any other man. I expect no more or less of her because she is a woman, and I'm certainly repulsed at any idea that she or anyone else is going to "rescue" women in this country. We make our own beds, even when it comes to childbearing. Although I must admit that our general survival does depend more heavily on access to competent natal healthcare--and I just don't hear that Clinton's ready to fight for single-payer universal healthcare.

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  9. I also think that reducing this election to "breaking the glass ceiling" or, of even less importance, having "Bill" back, is seriously a disservice to every person in this country.

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