| Columns & Features | ||
| Marie Cocco |
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Sexism in Politics |
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WASHINGTON -- The national media have reveled in self-congratulation over Barack Obama's historic ascent to become the first African-American to have the nomination of a major party within his grasp. Racism, we have been told, is now a supposed irrelevancy in American politics, a vestige of those past battles that Obama pledges earnestly not to fight. Think, for a moment, of what might happen if a well-known media personality were to say of Obama: "Every time he comes on television, I involuntarily reach for my white hood." Would even Don Imus survive? Yet once she ran for president, Clinton was portrayed as an observer to her husband's administration -- why, The New York Times pointed out, she hadn't even attended National Security Council meetings. Can you imagine the ruckus if she had? Such a revelation would likely have caused a bigger stir than did the videotape of an impeccable woman attending a November campaign event for John McCain leaning forward determinedly to ask, "How do we beat the b----?" An excellent question, McCain replied. The exchange never drew the abundance of national analysis given to Hillary's cleavage, her alleged "cackle" or those wrinkles that were so pronounced in a photograph that zoomed around the Internet. Twenty-four years have passed since Geraldine Ferraro was the Democratic vice presidential nominee, the first -- and only -- woman to have a spot on a major party's ticket. Ferraro was subjected to George H.W. Bush's post-debate taunt that he'd kicked a "little ass," while first lady Barbara Bush assessed Ferraro as someone who "rhymes with rich." A supposedly enlightened generation later, Clinton has had it far worse. The senator's emotional moment in a diner, when her voice caught as she answered a sympathetic question, was immediately dissected as a possible Clintonian calculation. No doubt New Hampshire women thought differently, and brought their -- how to say it? -- difference of opinion into the voting booth. Obama's candidacy may yet deliver us to the promised land of post-racial politics. Right now the idea is either irrational exuberance or a fascinating theory, still to be tested. Neither racism nor sexism has disappeared from American life, and we'd best admit it. But standards of public discourse should not differ depending on the candidate. If you -- or the media -- wouldn't hurl racist insults at Obama, it's time to call out those who have made Clinton's candidacy a celebration of their own sexism. |
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Marie Cocco's e-mail address is mariecocco@washpost.com. |
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Copyright 2008, Washington Post Writers Group, 1150 15th St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20071 |