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The 'Electability' Question: Don't Fall for Sexist, Racist Clickbait
The Electability Question: Dont Fall for Sexist, Racist Clickbait
PUBLISHED 7/23/2024 by Jennifer Weiss-Wolf
Questioning the electability of a candidate who has made a career of supporting womens lives and fundamental rights in an election largely defined by these issues is irresponsible journalism.
Vice President Kamala Harris on the South Lawn of the White House on July 22, 2024. (Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images)
Vice President Kamala Harris has won the necessary support to secure her place at the top of the Democratic ticket. An immediate parade of headlines followed: Is America Ready to Elect a Woman? Can a Black Woman Win? Why are powerful women so damn unlikeable? Wait, dont answer. It is a sexist, racist trap. Refuse to fall for the clickbait. On the right, the attacks on Harris are predictable, with Trump promising to Willie Horton her as presidential candidate, as reported by The Bulwark.
In JD Vance as Trumps vice presidential pick, a new twist to the caricature has emerged: Harris as a childless cat lady, miserable with her life and with no direct stake in the future of the country. Never mind the irony of Vance zeroing in on reproductive tropes, a rich twist for the party that knows all too well its role in decimating abortion access is its Achilles heel, with zero mentions of it at last weeks convention.
As for Harris, a staunch supporter of reproductive rights, this of course is a massive electoral edge. Poll after poll shows that the majority of Americans disapprove of the Dobbs decision, support abortion and turn out to vote on the issue. Which is why the persistent doomsday handwringing and headlining from the mainstream news media is doubly frustrating. Posing womens leadership writ large as an open and unanswered questionand questioning the electability of a candidate who has made a career of supporting womens lives and fundamental rights in an election largely defined by these issuesis nothing short of irresponsible journalism.
Womens Leadership Around the World
First, lets be clear: Women lead politics around the world every single day. According to U.N. Women, there are 27 countries that have a woman serving as head of state and/or government. Latin American countries have had women in executive office since the 1970s; last month, Claudia Sheinbaum was elected president of Mexico by a sweeping majority after beating the other leading (female) candidate. In the U.S., more than 30 percent of elected state-level executives are women, totaling 99, of whom nearly a quarter are women of color. Women serve as governor in 12 states; Michigan has a trifecta of women at the helm in the roles of governor, attorney general and secretary of state. Twelve states each also have women in the roles of attorney general and secretary of state.
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Link to tweet
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Gratefully, The Nations Elie Mystal offered just the antidote needed in Beware The People Who Claim America Isnt Ready for a Black Woman President:
I dont know, or care, if America is ready to have a Black woman president right now, because America has more than enough time to get itself ready. If youre not already there, I suggest you download some kind of app What to Expect While Expecting a Black Woman President or something. But this is what were doing now.
Simply stated, Black women are electable if we elect them. Period. Theres your headline.
https://msmagazine.com/2024/07/24/kamala-harris-indian-women/
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