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In It to Win It
Head Hilary
Heart Bernie
"Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has
provided tone and texture to this race.
He has forced Secretary Clinton to hone
her positions on health care, Wall Street
and income inequality. He came so amazingly
close to toppling her in Iowa that it gave me
Post Dramatic Stress Syndrome."
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I
am looking forward to November 8, 2016, and to voting for Hilary Rodham
Clinton to lead these United States. I am so extremely excited
that a woman of character, experience, and discernment can lead our
nation. Even as I look forward to the November vote, I am fully
enjoying the path to November. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has
provided tone and texture to this race. He has forced Secretary
Clinton to hone her positions on health care, Wall Street and income
inequality. He came so amazingly close to toppling her in Iowa
that it gave me Post Dramatic Stress Syndrome. She didn’t make my
drama hers, though. She has managed, with stoic dignity, to stake
her claim for this presidency.
My head is with Secretary Hilary Clinton, but my heart is with Senator
Bernie Sanders. I realize that he has promised everything and
hasn’t shared how he might pay for much of it -- free tuition,
universal health care, or Wall Street reform. Still, his
energetic bluster has been a galvanizing factor in a race that might
otherwise have been seen as a cakewalk or a coronation. Hilary
needs to be pushed as hard as Senator Sanders can push her. And
even though Sanders says he does not care about her “damn emails”, the
email conversation has to remind Senator Clinton that she has to figure
out ways to restore trust among those who support her positions but
look askance at the ways she has been too frequently presented.
There is an element of sexism in this. Hilary Clinton has been on
the national stage for several decades, from the time when her husband,
was elected governor of Arkansas in the 1980s. As First Lady, she
had to juggle her smarts and her secondary role, blundering as she
tried to offer clarity around health care, soaring as she provided
rhetorical leadership on women and children’s issues. And since
the Clintons left the White House, she has been nimble and focused as a
Senator, managing to make friends in both political parties, and
managing to provide solid international leadership as Secretary of
State. Were she a man, would she be judged as harshly because
some find her “unlikeable”? Would her every facial expression be
parsed? Would opponents feel free to comment on her marital
business? Thrice-married Donald Trump has spoken of Bill
Clinton’s fidelity, but it is documented that he was a big time
philanderer. Carly Fiorina says she would have left her husband
if he’d cheated like Bill, but we don’t know that, do we? What we
know is that Hilary’s gender is a double-edged sword. I cringe
whenever she says, “I am woman”, or “the only woman”, or some reference
to her clear self-evident gender. But I also cringe when the
gender-bashers seem incapable of interpreting her words and her work
fairly.
That’s not why I’ll vote for Hilary, though. I’ll vote for her
because she is a center-left moderate (Bernie Sanders is not in charge
of who gets to be a progressive, and I really don’t care as much about
labels as about outcomes) who will pragmatically work toward social and
economic justice. She isn’t perfect and may, indeed, be
fundamentally flawed (as most politicians are), but she has been a
consistent advocate for the least and the left out – for children and
for elders. Is she weak on Wall Street reform?
Absolutely. But as Bernie Sanders pushes her, she gets stronger.
A year ago, many predicted this race as a dynastic smack down, with Jeb
Bush and Hilary Clinton winning primaries toe-to-toe. Who would
have thought that an unhinged demagogue, Donald Trump, would suck much
of the air out of the Republican space, leaving babbling bumblers to
confuse adhominum ignorance with issues? The collective
performance of the Republican team could not equal that of either
Sanders or Clinton, but those R’s keep slogging on. To what
end? Do we really want a President who will trash talk Putin,
Mexico and the United Nations? Do we want sons of immigrants who
do vilely disrespect their ancestors that they’d offer punitive
possibilities for citizenship?
I’m not really torn between my head and my heart. I’m simply
enjoying the excitement of Bernie Sanders, and the way he has
galvanized young people, especially, to become politically
engaged. I am hoping that his commitment to the process is such
that he will encourage his supporters to remain involved, even after
Hilary wins the Democratic nomination. And I’m sad that a woman
who might knock it out of the park can also be kicked to the curb if
this campaign becomes corrosive.
Congressman Stephanie Tubbs Jones was a sorority sister (Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, of course), and a fierce legislator. She stuck by
Hilary Clinton in 2008 even after then-Senator Barack Obama entered the
Presidential race and earned the endorsement and support of many
“mainstream” African Americans. Stephanie and Hilary had “heart”
with each other. As a woman, Hilary can’t out shout Bernie
without appearing shrill. She can’t out-snide him without
appearing *itchy. But she can out heart him if she channels
Stephanie’s energy. Stephanie Tubbs Jones was in it to win it.
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr. Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is the Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. A native San Franciscan, she is the President and
owner of Economic Education a 501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in
Washington, D.C. During her time as the 15th President of Bennett
College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was the architect of exciting and
innovative transformation at America’s oldest historically black
college for women. Contact Dr. Malveaux and BC. |
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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