In recent months, I’ve noticed a trend I find troublesome: the absence of young female leadership in the Democratic Party. We have our lady stars on the left, but they seem older like Hillary Clinton and Nancy Pelosi, expert in a single field like Elizabeth Warren, too far left to attract the center like Cindy Sheehan, or media celebrities like Katrina vanden Heuvel, Jane Hamsher, or my personal favorite, Rachel Maddow. I’m not putting any of these women down. They just don’s till the niche that Palin does for Republicans, and it’s a niche we need to fill, and it stems from the scarcity of woman candidates.
This morning I found an editorial by Ana Holmes and Rebecca Traister that crystallizes my thinking on the subject:
…But the sad truth is that Democrats often prefer their women fulfilling similarly diminutive models for behavior. Consider how Hillary Clinton has been treated, at times, by those in her own party: Democratic leaders never really celebrated Mrs. Clinton’s nation-altering place in history as the first female candidate to get so close to a major party’s presidential nomination. Indeed, she is most appreciated when she plays well with others in the Senate or the State Department; when she behaves like a fierce competitor, she is compared to Glenn Close’s bunny-boiling virago from “Fatal Attraction.”
The left’s failure to nurture and celebrate female politicians has had a significant effect on its policies. In recent years, Democratic majorities and progressive legislation seem to have been built on steady trade-offs of reproductive rights, culminating this year when the first female speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, was forced to push through health care reform with a compromise on abortion financing.
An older generation of female Democrats, including Mrs. Clinton and Ms. Pelosi, are about as eager to mount a Palin-style girl-powered campaign as they are to wear a miniskirt on the House floor. For them, proudly or aggressively touting one’s feminist credentials (if you’re actually a feminist, that is) is taboo. It’s considered too, well, female.
But as women of a different generation — of, gulp, Sarah Palin’s generation — we wonder if Democrats shouldn’t look to her for twisted inspiration, and recognize that the future of women in politics will be about coming to terms with (and inventing) new models.
Imagine a Democrat willing to brag about breaking the glass ceiling at the explosive beginning, not the safe end, of her campaign. A liberal politician taking to Twitter to argue that big broods and a “culture of life” are completely compatible with reproductive freedom. A female candidate on the left who speaks as angrily and forcefully about her rivals’ shortcomings as Sarah Barracuda does about the Pelosis and Obamas of the world. A smart, unrelenting female, who, unlike Ms. Palin, wants to tear down, not reinforce, traditional ways of looking at women. But that will require a party that is eager to discover, groom, promote and then cheer on such a progressive Palin… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <NY Times>
The rest of this two page editorial is well worth the read, and I strongly encourage you to click through.
It amazes me that the Republicans are able to field so many female candidates, especially considering their positions on women’s rights. How women can support a party that preaches reproductive slavery and helps greedy corporations to steal their children’s future is beyond me.
As much as we hate what she represents, Snake Oil Sarah has a style that resonates with middle America. We dodged a bullet in 2008. If Palin had been able to discuss issues intelligently, actually knew what she read, and could remember her own name without writing it on her hand, it would have been a horse race that McConJob and Mooseolini might have actually won. Then we would be funding five wars, not just two, out of a full depression.
Whom do we have available to fill this niche, and how can we balance the gender gap?