Chelsea Clinton thinks America should elect her mother president because she’s a woman
writes
Benny Huang.
She’s setting the tone for the next
presidential election, making it about gender when it should really be
about issues. Her mother employed very much the same tactic in 2008 when
she tried to make her seemingly inevitable election into a historic
“first” for women.
Her hopes were dashed when a (half) black guy
hijacked the oppression narrative and ran away with the nomination. His
blackness trumped her femininity.
What Clinton was trying to do in 2008 was to demonstrate what a hard
row she had to hoe with all of those sexist men out there trying to
preserve the presidency as a boys’ club. In New Hampshire, a group of
supposed male chauvinists heckled her with shouts of “Iron my shirt!”
Without missing a beat, Clinton retorted, “Ah, the remnants of
sexism—alive and well,” which elicited cheers from the crowd. After the
applause had died down, she added: “As I think has just been abundantly
demonstrated, I am also running to break through the highest and hardest
glass ceiling.”
You go, girl!
How convenient it was to have a few foot soldiers in the #waronwomen
right there in the audience to illustrate her point. Almost too convenient.
A New York Daily News reporter followed the two hecklers, later
revealed to be Nick Gemelli and Adolfo Gonzalez, to their cars.
Shockingly, Gemelli’s ride sported a “Hillary for President” bumper
sticker, which he was at a loss to explain. The two young men were
actually interns at a Boston radio station and they passed the incident
off as some kind of radio prank.
Gemelli and Gonzalez were obviously plants. The whole thing was
stage-managed to make Hillary Clinton appear to be a feminist warrior
battling heroically against the forces of reactionary sexism.
Which is
what these electoral “firsts” are always about. They are
products manufactured by campaigns and marketed by the news media. If
that sounds kind of redundant it’s because the media and the Democratic
Party are so interwoven that they sometimes appear to be the same thing.
Allow me to explain how electoral “firsts” work. The modus operandi
here is for the media to constantly harp on the fact that their
preferred candidate suffers a handicap because he or she is different,
which naturally requires them to malign America as a very dark place,
full of sexism, racism, this “-ism,” and that “-ism.” Then the media ask
if we’re “ready” for someone who’s a little different to serve in a
particular office.
The implication is that if the media’s preferred candidate is
rejected at the polls then only the residual prejudices of yesteryear
can be blamed. As an added bonus, it also forces the opposing
candidate’s supporters to constantly explain that they aren’t motivated
by bigotry.
I’ve noticed that the media’s concern for “firsts” seems a little
lacking when the “first” is a Republican. Considering the media’s
fixation on race and racism, it’s a little odd that they aren’t more
interested in the one and a half Hispanics now running for
president—Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz. But they’re Republicans, and while I
fully expect the media soon to ask if they’re too brown for the GOP,
they will never portray either of them as racial trailblazers
struggling against bigotry the way Obama was portrayed during his two
presidential campaigns.
Why not? Isn’t our willingness to elect people of various backgrounds
the yardstick by which we measure progress? Oh, that depends.
In 2008, the media asked if America was too racist to elect a black
president but we elected one despite the fact that he couldn’t assemble a
coherent sentence without a teleprompter. So America has been
acquitted, right? Not so fast. In 2012, the media asked if America was
too racist to reelect a black president.
Did they miss 2012’s other potential electoral “first”? We had never
had a Mormon in the White House, and still haven’t. So where was the
pressure campaign to elect a Mormon?
Apples and oranges, some will say, because Mormons haven’t endured
quite the same suffering in this country as blacks. Okay. Of course,
Mormons were never enslaved but they were forcibly driven from a few US
states and it was legal to murder them in Missouri until 1976. But let’s
not lose focus on the more important question—which group faces a
steeper climb to elected office?
… These silly games we play with “firsts”
are really the worst kind of politics. If we want to realize the country
that Chelsea Clinton claims to want—one in which equal opportunity is
the rule—we have to dispense with all of the stupid jockeying for
victimhood. Look at how shameless it’s become—Hillary Clinton actually
perpetrated a hoax against herself to make it appear that she, a
political titan, was actually the lovable underdog, and for no other
reason than because she’s a woman. The proper way to create the equal
opportunity that Chelsea Clinton claims to want is to make elections
about issues rather than race or gender.