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Hadley Freeman: I like Bernie as much as the next idealist, but Hillary gets my vote | Hadley Freeman: I like Bernie as much as the next idealist, but Hillary gets my vote |
(4 months later) | |
Donald Trump talking about the size of his genitals during a presidential debate: I should have predicted that. But who’d have thought that young, liberal American women would be more excited about a 74-year-old male senator than the prospect of the first female president? | Donald Trump talking about the size of his genitals during a presidential debate: I should have predicted that. But who’d have thought that young, liberal American women would be more excited about a 74-year-old male senator than the prospect of the first female president? |
Young Americans don’t like Hillary Clinton, and young American women really don’t like her. According to a recent poll, 61% of young American women support Bernie Sanders. Clinton attracts a mere 28%. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to figure out whether this is a feminist triumph (they don’t just see her as a woman but judge her as a human! Good!) or a tragedy (er, they hate her. Bad). I’ll let you know when I’ve worked that one out. | Young Americans don’t like Hillary Clinton, and young American women really don’t like her. According to a recent poll, 61% of young American women support Bernie Sanders. Clinton attracts a mere 28%. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to figure out whether this is a feminist triumph (they don’t just see her as a woman but judge her as a human! Good!) or a tragedy (er, they hate her. Bad). I’ll let you know when I’ve worked that one out. |
The best spin the Democratic National Committee could put on this was claiming that young women today are complacent, having lived their entire lives after Roe v Wade. This argument is at best patronising and at worst completely absurd, unless Sanders is somehow secretly plotting to ban abortion. But the problem is not young people – it’s Clinton. When you talk to Sanders supporters they have the fire of excitement in their eyes. Talk to Clinton supporters – of any age – and they look like they’re at a buffet where the only available food is broccoli. They’re not excited but, dammit, they’ll make the best of what’s there, who’s got a fork? | The best spin the Democratic National Committee could put on this was claiming that young women today are complacent, having lived their entire lives after Roe v Wade. This argument is at best patronising and at worst completely absurd, unless Sanders is somehow secretly plotting to ban abortion. But the problem is not young people – it’s Clinton. When you talk to Sanders supporters they have the fire of excitement in their eyes. Talk to Clinton supporters – of any age – and they look like they’re at a buffet where the only available food is broccoli. They’re not excited but, dammit, they’ll make the best of what’s there, who’s got a fork? |
But I’d like to make a defence of Clinton, particularly to young liberal women. Clinton, in this election, is like a candidate from a different era. It’s not centrism and compromise that get the people going these days – it’s the candidates hailing from the far left and right, who come in blazing with big promises and grand visions. These are the candidates who are deemed authentic, a word used by voters to mean “believes what I believe”. | But I’d like to make a defence of Clinton, particularly to young liberal women. Clinton, in this election, is like a candidate from a different era. It’s not centrism and compromise that get the people going these days – it’s the candidates hailing from the far left and right, who come in blazing with big promises and grand visions. These are the candidates who are deemed authentic, a word used by voters to mean “believes what I believe”. |
Now, I like Bernie Sanders. Any sane person with a conscience likes Bernie Sanders. Also, he’s a stubborn, New York Jew; if he had less hair he could be a member of my family. He attracts young people because he is promising to change the world – or America, anyway. But would he actually get anything done as president? | Now, I like Bernie Sanders. Any sane person with a conscience likes Bernie Sanders. Also, he’s a stubborn, New York Jew; if he had less hair he could be a member of my family. He attracts young people because he is promising to change the world – or America, anyway. But would he actually get anything done as president? |
His entire campaign has been built on the promise to break up the banks. But in a recent interview, it was clear that he had no idea 1) what the banks are, 2) how to do this, or 3) what the repercussions would be. | His entire campaign has been built on the promise to break up the banks. But in a recent interview, it was clear that he had no idea 1) what the banks are, 2) how to do this, or 3) what the repercussions would be. |
Then there were his answers to foreign policy issues, which ranged from “I’m just telling you what I happen to believe” to “I haven’t thought about it a whole lot.” Honestly, I don’t blame him. This stuff, the nitty-gritty of governing, is boring; even worse than that is trying to turn political visions into actual laws. | Then there were his answers to foreign policy issues, which ranged from “I’m just telling you what I happen to believe” to “I haven’t thought about it a whole lot.” Honestly, I don’t blame him. This stuff, the nitty-gritty of governing, is boring; even worse than that is trying to turn political visions into actual laws. |
Just ask Barack Obama, who aged about 20 years trying to get what someone once called his “hopey changey stuff” through during his presidency. This, I suspect, is why Sanders’ supporters are white and middle class: the ethnic minorities have gone to Clinton and the working-class whites to Trump, because these are the voters who can’t afford to bet on a dream and go instead to the candidate who they trust to get stuff done. | Just ask Barack Obama, who aged about 20 years trying to get what someone once called his “hopey changey stuff” through during his presidency. This, I suspect, is why Sanders’ supporters are white and middle class: the ethnic minorities have gone to Clinton and the working-class whites to Trump, because these are the voters who can’t afford to bet on a dream and go instead to the candidate who they trust to get stuff done. |
So let’s look again at Clinton. I get why plenty of Democrats don’t like her: she’s hawkish and she is, to borrow a phrase, “intensely relaxed” around big money. She also doesn’t do the big vision, but I actually think that’s a good thing: she does incremental changes, because she is a realist, not a romantic. She is willing to compromise to get a little bit done, and, personally, I’d rather vote for a candidate who promises 60% and delivers 30% than one who promises 100% and delivers nothing. She knows you can’t force the opposition to submit to your point of view. She is a grownup. | So let’s look again at Clinton. I get why plenty of Democrats don’t like her: she’s hawkish and she is, to borrow a phrase, “intensely relaxed” around big money. She also doesn’t do the big vision, but I actually think that’s a good thing: she does incremental changes, because she is a realist, not a romantic. She is willing to compromise to get a little bit done, and, personally, I’d rather vote for a candidate who promises 60% and delivers 30% than one who promises 100% and delivers nothing. She knows you can’t force the opposition to submit to your point of view. She is a grownup. |
Which brings me back to the young women voters. In an election that has been dominated by sexism, no American politician has experienced more in her career – from both sides – than Clinton. She’s “too boring” one minute, “too ballsy” the next. If she talks policy she’s “too wonkish”, if she hugs a baby she’s “too grandmotherly”. | Which brings me back to the young women voters. In an election that has been dominated by sexism, no American politician has experienced more in her career – from both sides – than Clinton. She’s “too boring” one minute, “too ballsy” the next. If she talks policy she’s “too wonkish”, if she hugs a baby she’s “too grandmotherly”. |
Like I say, it’s sexism, but also it’s because no one knows what a woman president looks like. Clinton is a tough woman who knows how government works, who has been fighting for women’s rights since before we were born and who produces the goods. That’s a good template for a woman in the White House. Anyone who asks for perfection from a politician will be disappointed, and Clinton ain’t perfect. But she looks pretty presidential to me. | Like I say, it’s sexism, but also it’s because no one knows what a woman president looks like. Clinton is a tough woman who knows how government works, who has been fighting for women’s rights since before we were born and who produces the goods. That’s a good template for a woman in the White House. Anyone who asks for perfection from a politician will be disappointed, and Clinton ain’t perfect. But she looks pretty presidential to me. |
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