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Misogyny In Politics

Posted by Michelle Moquin on October 15th, 2016

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Good morning!

It isn’t just American that has rampant misogyny in politics.

From DailyKos:

Misogyny in politics

Ditch_the_Witch

Misogynist “Ditch the Witch” sign attacking former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard

Misogynistic, sexist crap ain’t just hurled at Hillary—ask former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard and other women in politics.

Many voters in the U.S. are watching, reading, and reacting to the train wreck of sexist, misogynistic remarks spewed by Donald Trump, his campaign, and surrogates. But it’s easy to simply attribute this to Trump’s glaring defects, and fail to examine the long history of what women entering into U.S. politics face from a broad spectrum of attackers. Hillary Clinton is, of course, a lightning rod for this type of slime slinging (not only from Trump), and has been throughout her entire career in the public eye.

Too often the discussion of the sexism hurled her way gets twisted into something that is explained away as a deep flaw in Clinton herself. It’s a massive piece of victim blaming participated in by both men and women (the New York Times’Maureen Dowd is an example of the latter).

Last week I got the opportunity to address this issue with a group of approximately 120 young, mostly freshmen, mostly female students in an introduction to women’s, gender, and sexuality studies class I team teach with three other women.

These students have grown up with a very different sense of Hillary Clinton than I have. They are 18 to 20 years old, and will be voting in a presidential election for the first time in their lives. I was born the same year as Hillary, while they were only 10 years old when she ran for president against Barack Obama. All that was said about her in the media during that time period is fixed in their heads—whether or not they are voting for her in this election (and almost all of them are). Many are doing so after switching from being supporters of Bernie Sanders. They consider themselves to be feminists, are familiar with concepts and terms like “intersectionality,” and are pro-choice. Quite a few are LBGTQ and the others are proud allies. My campus has a very high percentage of female undergrads and many of them opt to take women’s studies.

I opened the class with a photo collage—portraits of women (no names attached) who are or have been political leaders. I asked them to name current female elected heads of state. One young woman (incorrectly) volunteered Queen Elizabeth, while another mentioned Angela Merkel. The rest of the class was silent.

I wonder how well a lot of adults would do with the same question.

How many can you name?

(I took the liberty to black out the names just to have a little fun!) 

Untitled design (3)

How many did you get?

My past stories here have talked about the absence of teaching much of women’s history in our high schools. Not one of my freshmen students had ever heard of Shirley ChisholmBarbara Jordan, or Ann Richards before taking our course. Last year, only a handful could identify the name of the female senator who represents New York state, Kirsten Gillibrand. None knew the names of any of the women in our state legislature. And though Bernie Sanders was here in town, at a rally campaigning for Zephyr Teachout for Congress just two weeks ago, the students flocked to go see Bernie, not even knowing her name or that he had come to stump for her.

It is within this vacuum of information and historical context that these young women and a few young men have developed opinions about Secretary Clinton. This view, and even the perspective of those who are avidly supporting her candidacy, have been so tainted by our media that it’s amazing anyone has been able to transcend the ugliness.

These young people are angry at Donald Trump, and won’t be voting for him. They rightly see he is a racist, have taken note of his sexism and xenophobia, and they are very well-informed about his homophobic running mate Mike Pence. Some of them have been participating in Periods For Pence on facebook and twitter.

That still doesn’t change what they think they know about Hillary Clinton. Rather than open the class with a discussion of Hillary and the decades-long media narrative that has shaped their views, I instead introduced them to former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard and the misogyny she faced. I chose Gillard because Australia is English-speaking, majority white, and had been a recent example of extreme misogyny that resembled much of what Clinton has experienced here in the U.S., though for a much shorter period of time.

I played the class this video:

The students’ shock after viewing this was palpable. I followed it with a portion of the viral video speech on misogyny by Gillard from 2012.

(This video is 15 minutes. I watched it years ago when it first aired in 2012. If you haven’t seen it, it is worth your time.) 

It’s still spelled m-i-s-o-g-y-n-y. But now it has a new meaning, thanks to a speech that redefined political shaming.

The Associated Press reports that Australia’s Macquarie Dictionary has updated its definition of the word “misogyny” after Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard gave a take-no-prisoners lecturing of opposition leader Tony Abbott about his anti-female ways. (h/t Newser)

Gillard included several mentions of Abbot’s “misogyny” and “sexism” in the speech. The gone-viral Oct. 9 lambasting prompted word-keepers to take notice.

Macquarie Dictionary added “entrenched prejudice of women” to augment the established “hatred of women,” according to the BBC. The expanded definition will appear in the next edition, the Australian reported.

Macquarie Editor Sue Butler said Gillard’s remarks highlight how the term has evolved from a pathological loathing of the gender. “We decided that we had the basic definition, hatred of women, but that’s not how misogyny has been used for about the last 20, 30 years, particularly in feminist language,” she told ABC Radio. “Sexist does seem to be moving towards this description of surface features and misogynist applies to the underlying attitude.”

Then came the historical parallel: the crap thrown at Hillary.

The response from students was electric, and when we split up the large class into our smaller discussion groups (which is how the class is designed) we continued to talk. Several of the girls said they were “on fire,” with rage. They demanded to see more. So we looked at how interviewers from the media have posed questions to Hillary over decades.

Watching the responses of my students was like seeing light bulbs go off around the room.

We talked about how the decades-long narrative about Hillary has tainted us all. I admitted it has also affected me, though to a lesser degree since I had my mom’s admiration for her as a check against buying the entire package. My mom always thought Hillary was smarter than Bill. Since my mom was a member of  Delta Sigma Theta, if alive today she would have been one of many Deltas urging Hillary to run in 2013.

We looked at this contradiction to the Hillary hater cabal’s narrative, titled “Clinton Most Admired Woman for Record 20thTime.”

Clinton has been the most admired woman each of the last 14 years, and 20 times overall, occupying the top spot far longer than any other woman or man in Gallup’s history of asking the most admired question. Since 1993, the year she was first named most admired woman, Clinton has stayed in the news as first lady, U.S. senator, secretary of state and a two-time presidential candidate.

Former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt was named most admired woman 13 times during her lifetime, putting her second to Clinton in terms of first-place finishes. Dwight Eisenhower has 12 No. 1 finishes, the most for any man. Obama, the most admired man each of the last eight years, is now tied with Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan for top overall finishes among men.

The students are now reading Media Matters’ “A Comprehensive Guide To Sexist Attacks On Hillary Clinton From The 2008 Campaign.”

When placed into a global context, it’s clear we have a ways to go before women can take their rightful place in global politics. Women have a right to leadership, and they have a right to be good, bad, or indifferent leaders—just like men.

Pew Research provides some key data in “Number of women leaders around the world has grown, but they’re still a small group.”

Most Americans believe a woman will be elected president within their lifetime, a milestone that would add the U.S. to a growing list of countries that have had a female leader. But the overall number of countries that have been led by women still remains relatively small, and in most of these countries, women haven’t held power for long.

FT_15.07.24_womenLeadersMap

There are currently 18 female world leaders, including 12 female heads of government and 11 elected female heads of state (some leaders are both, and figurehead monarchs are not included), according to United Nations data. These women account for about one-in-ten of today’s leaders of United Nations member states. Half of them are the first women to hold their country’s highest office.

Yet, even while the number of female leaders has more than doubled since 2005, a woman in power is hardly the norm around the world. Sixty-three of 142 nations studied by the World Economic Forum have had a female head of government or state at some point in the 50 years up to 2014, but in nearly two-thirds of those nations a woman was in power for less than four of the 50 years – including 11 countries (17%) where a woman led for less than a year.

Political scientists and scholars who study gender in politicshave produced detailed analyses of the obstacles women face around the world in the political realm. Not all agree that misogyny is a major factor. They do mostly concur that watching it happen to women who do run and win (which in some cases ends in violence and death) has a tendency to discourage politics as a career choice. From my perspective, one cannot ignore the violence or the sexism.

I remember reading “Top 10 sexist moments in politics: Julia Gillard, Hillary Clinton and more” in the Guardian a few years ago. Somewhere, sadly, there is an updated list.

Having this kind of discussion is often discouraged and derailed. Those who raise the issue are often accused of “playing the woman card,” the same way that those of us who push back against racism are accused of “playing the race card.” My standard reply to both is: “My life is not a card game.”

The_Woman_Card

I was elated to see the Clinton campaign turn the tables and offer a real “Woman Card” to people who donate five bucks or more.

I have mine.

Have you got yours?

We ended our class on a high after discussing the overwhelming sexism of the critiques of how political women look and dress (queue the attacks on Hillary’s pantsuits!). And we enjoyed the exuberance of a #PantsuitPower flashmob for Hillary that had taken place in New York City that very weekend.

Hillary and the Democratic women (and men) she is supporting who are running for office can use your help with GOTV.

So take some time to make calls for Hillary.

In doing so, you strike a blow against sexism and misogyny, and for democracy and equality.

💪🏽♀💪🏽

Readers: How many women leaders did you guess correctly? 

Blog me.

Gordon, et al: Nice to hear it coming from some men who get it. It baffles me how many people tout this false equivalency and more baffling that people fall for it. The logic escapes me.

Happy Saturday!

Peace Out. 

Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.

Gratefully your blog host,

michelle

Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)

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20 Responses to “Misogyny In Politics”

  1. Ella Says:

    Most men are controlled by the little heads. If women don’t stay alert and stamp out each attempt at controlling, or abusing them men will take that as a sign that it is okay.

  2. Richard Says:

    Why do women be treated with kid gloves ? This world is a free for all. Live – compete – face the muck at ones own risk and choice . do not frequently be a cry baby cribbing .

  3. Kline Says:

    We never see any outrage. hashtag trending, opinion making against misogynist GOP politicians by fellow republican politicians.

  4. Manard Says:

    Michelle, I hardly agree with you. Every media venture seems to have to its own set of feminists to flaunt :)
    Good part is – this author had the decency to acknowledge that Male politicians too face abuse – whether such abuse is worse as compared to the abuse faced by female politicians will be a matter of unending debate though!!
    The (feminist-style) conclusion drawn from article is :
    * Abuse against Women politicians = Misogyny (how can we let it happen in 2016?)
    * Abuse against Male politicians = yeah, it exists, so what? it’s not Misandry!! nothing much, deal with Misogyny OK..!!

  5. Henna Says:

    Why are women putting up with the GOP. If women dare disagree with their opinions about our bodies, they enter into a tirade of attacks. The GOP does not know how to agree to disagree without causing hard feelings. They attack women as being amoral or anti-christian if they voice the slightest difference with their opinions.

  6. Debbie Says:

    Michelle, you have become a big uncontrollable head ache to those who would take advantage of women. Instantaneously your efforts can create manipulative opinions in favor of women in need.

  7. Jackie Says:

    I agree with everything you said Michelle. Here is another example of misogyny at work.

    Bob Sutton, chairman of the Broward County GOP Executive Committee in Florida, voiced confidence that Clinton would be easy to defeat in a debate—with a comment not likely to endear him to some female voters. “I think when Donald Trump debates Hillary Clinton she’s going to go down like Monica Lewinsky,” he said.

    Turns out though that once again men have underestimated the power, skill and brains of a woman.

  8. Lydia Says:

    WOW, Jackie#7, at a rally in North Carolina trump’s closing argument was I only grab attractive p**sies. When he addressed Jessica Leeds, who claims Trump groped her on an airplane 30-some years ago. “She would not be my first choice,” he said.

  9. Juanita Says:

    The creep has long been getting away with his misogyny. Donald Trump criticized Khloe Kardashian’s weight during a 2009 taping of Celebrity Apprentice, before firing her from the show. He described her as a “piglet” and wondered aloud why the show couldn’t “get the hot one” (presumably a reference to Kim Kardashian West).

    Unfortunately, feelings about someone’s looks are not grounds for firing them, prompting Trump to ask his staff: “What’s the reason we can get her off [the show]?”

    White women allow this because they follow their men lock-step.

  10. Nadia Says:

    Trump’s only defense against numerous allegations of sexual assault is to blame the media.

  11. Susan Says:

    As the old saying goes “fruit doesn’t fall too far from the tree.” Donald Trump, Jr. suggested in 2013 that women who couldn’t deal with workplace harassment did not belong in the workplace to begin with. “If you can’t handle some of the basic stuff that’s become a problem in the workforce today, then you don’t belong in the workforce,” he said.

  12. Kate Says:

    Susan #11, I was thinking the same thing. When I heard Jr. make a joke about how women who report sexual harassment were merely involved in a get-rich quick scheme.

    People who find those kind of jokes amusing, are forgetting that sexual harassment is, in fact, against the law.

  13. Anonymous Says:

    It appears when female politicians like Clinton, Bachmann, Wasserman Schultz, and even Nancy Pelosi take the aggressive approach to politics — which is an emblematic element for any political make-up — they’re somehow made out to be easy targets.

  14. Alycedale Says:

    The question arises as to whether trump will get the Cosby treatment. I seriously doubt it, and yet this man is running for POTUS. I am down with Cosby getting exactly what he is getting, but in comparison, he is an old black man no longer viable.

    So what you have is a rapist versus a potential POTUS.

  15. Candelaria Says:

    What I want to remind republican is when You Live In A Glass Tower Never Throw The First Stone.

    Specifically to racist Trump supporters -of all color. Please open your eyes to see that your Emperor is prancing around naked and we’re no longer amused, by his tricks and jive.

    You’ve been given adequate time for reflection and correction
    yet you insist on embracing lies and conspiracies over facts.

    So don’t blame us if his balls get punctured and deflated from resistance to truth, and commitment to lies.

    And it matters not if you’re tone deaf and dimwitted
    Too much bile, has been promoted as American made
    We now seek universal love, respect and better returns on our labor,
    Not go back to when ONLY white was right, and allowed might

    So take your Emperor and go create your own racist hate filled country
    Because you’ll Take Back No Country, on which hurting Natives still reside
    And where innocent black youths he still wants to be imprisoned
    While he remains King of Corporate Welfare, Sexual Assaults and more

  16. Sutama Says:

    Alycedale#14, He should get the same treatment like they did to Bill Cosby. They drag the man right through the mud. Trump should be no different. I will have to wait and see what happen. Remember they treat white folks different.

  17. Diana Says:

    What bothers me is this false equivalency between Bill Clinton having affairs with consenting women and trump forcing himself upon women.

    Why is the MSM entertaining this fucked up logic. I’m like you Michelle, the “logic escapes me.”

  18. Maribel Says:

    NO! Trump will not get the Cobsy treatment, nor the treatment that forced Pres. Obama from having to distance himself from his former black Pastor, who spoke the truth.

    Trump’s color make him as respectable as the fictitious American Apple Pie, and therefore he remains to many, the -also fictitious- white savior on a white horse.

    TRUMP!! American As Apple Pie?

    They enabled him when he insulted the handicapped
    Because, (as in Hitler’s Germany) the victim didn’t fit their mold.

    Or when he insulted women he claimed had a figure deficit
    And with that he felt emboldened to remain.

    They enabled him and probably secretly applauded
    When he spewed hurtful divisive venom on: Hispanics, Chinese, Muslims, African Americans and more.

    They forgot how Japanese Americans got wrongful internment
    By angry and resentful Americans -like Donald Trump

    Finally after objectifying beautiful white women while suggesting his gross behavior is what all men do.

    After allowing white men to drag OTWs and white women to the bottom of the gutters with no more people to dehumanize and terrorize mentally most white people now claim to be offended and appalled.

  19. Chicas Says:

    Alycedale#14, once again you have nailed it. White people have a real double standard (ie) Bill Crosby is a rapist but donald trump is not. Both of these men mistreated WOMENS .

    The only thing that white people are blind to see one was Black and one is white. Just because trump happen to be white makes him no better than Bill.

    So to you small, racist minded people I say no matter what color or lack of color, a rapist is a rapist. Just remember you have mothers, sister, aunts some of you may even have nothing but daughters, would you want either one of them assaulted.

    Of course not, you’d be out for blood. So stop the blind bullshit and call trump what he is, at best a predator, at worst a rapist.

    Oh! Another thing ask anyone that lives in New jersey about trump and jobs. 5 casinos all OUT of business, no jobs, no health care, etc. Just remember trump said vote on November 28th�

    If you are still inclined to vote for trump, follow your leader’s advice and do it on November 28th.

  20. Richard Says:

    Kaepernick was booed when he started for the 49ers for not wanting to be murdered by the police. Only white america would do that. Imagine if they were threaten by that kind of violence, they would want the entire nation to join in their angst.

    Me, I say to the terrorist as long as you are just blowing up those white folks neighborhoods I won’t boo.