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  <title>Erica C. Barnett's blog</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/erica-c-barnett"/>
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  <updated>2007-11-13T09:46:25-05:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>No Crystal Ball -- Still, We Wonder</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2008/02/26/no-crystal-ball-still-we-wonder" />
    <id>http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2008/02/26/no-crystal-ball-still-we-wonder</id>
    <published>2008-02-26T09:16:11-05:00</published>
    <updated>2008-02-26T09:19:18-05:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Erica C. Barnett</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Access to Abortion" />
    <category term="Contraception" />
    <category term="Election 2008" />
    <category term="Maternal Health" />
    <category term="Sexuality Education" />
    <category term="STI/HIV/AIDS Prevention" />
    <category term="Women’s Rights" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="Mike Huckabee" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Election 2008" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="reproductive health and election 2008" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[  <p>What would a Clinton or Obama presidency look like for women?  And would one such presidency be better than another? Has any moment in the campaign to this point revealed which candidate might better prioritize women’s health and rights when in office?</p>      ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[  <p>What would a Clinton or Obama presidency look like for women?  And would one such presidency be better for women than another?  </p>
<p>During his two terms as president, George W. Bush has done everything in his power to erode the rights of women in this country and abroad -- opposing access to <a class="glossary-term" href="/glossary/term/120"><acronym title="Emergency Contraception: Emergency contraception (also      known as EC, emergency birth control or the &amp;quot;morning after pill&amp;quot;) is a      safe and effective way to prevent pregnancy when taken within 72-120 hours      of unprotected intercourse.  Plan B      is a brand of EC, but certain birth control pills (oral contraceptives)      can also be prescribed for use as emergency contraception. EC is not an      abortifacient. (PPFA) ">emergency contraception</acronym></a>; supporting two of the most anti-choice Supreme Court justices in history; promoting harmful abstinence-only sex education programs; and supporting legislation that would redefine embryos as human beings whose rights trump those of pregnant women. For nearly eight years, the Bush administration has put women&#39;s needs last; eroded our rights in the name of &quot;values;&quot; and put us at risk of unintended pregnancy, violence, and disease.  </p>
<p>But this election offers the first opportunity in a very long time to reverse Bush&#39;s anti-woman legacy. If Obama&#39;s momentum, at the moment, seems unstoppable, a strong showing in Ohio and Texas could keep Clinton in the race until August.  No matter what happens in the primaries, Democrats will have a candidate with a strong pro-choice, pro-woman record in November. While presumptive Republican nominee <a href="http://votesmart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=53270" rel="nofollow">John McCain</a> has consistently received zero-percent ratings from every pro-choice organization that ranks candidates, both <a href="http://votesmart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=55463" rel="nofollow">Clinton</a> and <a href="http://votesmart.org/issue_rating_category.php?can_id=9490" rel="nofollow">Obama</a> have received 100-percent ratings from NARAL Pro-Choice America and Planned Parenthood.</p>
<p>The Democratic candidates&#39; records give a good indication why. As First Lady and a US senator, Clinton has built her reputation fighting for women&#39;s rights. A comprehensive list of Clinton&#39;s pro-choice proposals would take pages, so here are a few of the highlights: As First Lady, she helped pass the <a href="http://www.dol.gov/esa/whd/fmla/" rel="nofollow">Family and Medical Leave Act</a>, which requires employers to provide unpaid leave to care for newborn babies or family members, and helped found the <a href="http://www.teenpregnancy.org/" rel="nofollow">National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancies</a>, which set and achieved a goal of reducing teen pregnancies by one third. As senator, Clinton led the fight, in a hostile Republican-dominated Congress, to make <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/24/AR2006082400559.html" rel="nofollow">emergency contraception</a> available over the counter. She led the battle against the confirmation of anti-choice Supreme Court nominees John Roberts and Samuel Alito, arguing in Alito&#39;s case that the nominee would <a href="http://clinton.senate.gov/news/statements/details.cfm?id=250765" rel="nofollow">&quot;roll back decades of progress&quot;</a> for women. She led the fight in the Senate to get rid of the <a href="http://www.globalgagrule.org/" rel="nofollow">global gag rule</a>, which prohibits US funding for overseas groups that use funding from other sources to provide abortions or abortion counseling, and has vowed to devote her &quot;very first days in office&quot; to overturning that decision.</p>
<p>Currently, women make just 77 cents for every dollar earned by men. To help address this inequity, Clinton sponsored the <a href="http://www.pay-equity.org/info-leg.html" rel="nofollow">Paycheck Fairness Act</a>, which would help prevent pay discrimination against women and give women tools to fight for pay equity. She cosponsored legislation to add <a href="http://www.equalrightsamendment.org/" rel="nofollow">the Equal Rights Amendment</a> to the US constitution. And she has been a strong proponent of <em>real</em> sex education, sponsoring legislation (along with Obama) that would replace failed &quot;abstinence-only&quot; sex ed with comprehensive, medically accurate curricula.</p>
<p>Barack Obama&#39;s record on <a class="glossary-term" href="/glossary/term/133"><acronym title="Reproductive Rights: Auto generated by glossary_taxonomy_nodetitle, for Reproductive Rights">reproductive rights</acronym></a> and other issues that matter to women is undeniably shorter than Clinton&#39;s, though similarly consistent and unshirking. In the Illinois state senate, Obama opposed the Illinois Born Alive Infants Protection Act, which would have defined a fetus as a child, saying it would &quot;essentially bar abortions&quot;; voted against a statewide ban on &quot;partial-birth abortion&quot;; and supported legislation requiring insurance companies to cover all FDA-approved contraceptives. As a US senator, he <a href="http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/303500.html" rel="nofollow">cosponsored</a>, along with Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill, legislation that would restore birth control discounts for low-income and college women. He also cosponsored (along with Clinton) the <a href="http://www.prochoiceamerica.org/issues/abortion/access-to-abortion/freedom-of-choice-act.html" rel="nofollow">Freedom of Choice Act</a>, which would codify Roe v. Wade as the law of the land. When South Dakota passed a law banning all abortions, Obama was the only US senator to help raise money to <a href="http://www.barackobama.com/2008/01/22/obama_statement_on_35th_annive.php" rel="nofollow">repeal</a> the ban. He sponsored legislation that would effectively overturn a recent Supreme Court decision that curtails the ability of women and racial minorities to challenge past pay discrimination. He introduced the Responsible Fathers and Healthy Families Act, which would crack down on fathers who don&#39;t pay child support, fund support services for fathers and families, and support domestic violence prevention. And he cosponsored renewal of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Violence_Against_Women_Act" rel="nofollow">Violence Against Women Act</a>, which funds domestic-violence prevention efforts.</p>
<p>Has any moment in the campaign to this point revealed which candidate might better prioritize women&#39;s health and rights when in office?  As befits their records in Congress, both senators have vowed to put women front and center in the Oval Office. But last month, on the thirty-fifth anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Clinton released a comprehensive <a href="http://www.hillaryclinton.com/news/release/view/?id=5404" rel="nofollow">agenda for women&#39;s reproductive health care</a>. Clinton&#39;s agenda demonstrates her understanding of the vastness, and critical importance, of the <a class="glossary-term" href="/glossary/term/131"><acronym title="Reproductive Health: Auto generated by glossary_taxonomy_nodetitle, for Reproductive Health">reproductive health</acronym></a> issues on which President Bush has either stalled or rolled back progress. She has committed to appointing judges who will uphold a woman&#39;s right to choose; enacting the Freedom of Choice Act, which would codify a woman&#39;s right to obtain an abortion; expanding Title X, the 32-year-old national family-planning program, which Bush has frozen at 2001 levels for the past eight years; requiring health care plans to pay for contraception; restoring discounts for birth control on college campuses; and providing women stationed at overseas military bases the same level of reproductive health care as every US citizen. Both Clinton and Obama have vowed to expand the Family Medical Leave Act to cover millions more Americans.  Clinton has stated that she will implement paid family-leave programs in every state within the next eight years, expand block-grant programs that pay for child care, and prohibit employer discrimination against parents. Both she and Obama say they will require US employers to pay for seven annual days of sick leave.</p>
<p>The two candidates have both pledged to get serious on health care, but Sen. Clinton is the candidate <a href="http://www.hillaryclinton.com/feature/healthcareplan/" rel="nofollow">proposing universal health care</a>.  For women, including the one in five women under 65 who are currently uninsured, this may be her most significant priority. Economists and pundits differ over whether Obama&#39;s eschewing of mandates will doom his health care plan or not. Obama claims that in states that have universal coverage (Massachusetts, Oregon), mandates haven&#39;t worked, but Clinton counters that it&#39;s a strength of her plan that she&#39;s not giving away universal coverage before the bargaining begins.  Universal health care is a universal issue, but it&#39;s also a women&#39;s issue, because <a href="/www.kff.org/womenshealth/upload/6000_05.pdf" rel="nofollow">women without insurance are vulnerable</a> to unintended pregnancy, undetected cancer, and other preventable health care problems; more likely to avoid filling prescriptions and to forgo needed health care, including preventive care such as heart disease screenings, mammograms and Pap smears; and more likely to be diagnosed late and die early.</p>
<p>Obama&#39;s priorities are similar to Clinton&#39;s -- with a few differences of emphasis that are attractive to some feminists. As president, he has vowed to raise the raise the minimum wage -- and, importantly, to link it to inflation. Women make up 58 percent of minimum-wage earners, at least one million of them single mothers. He has also proposed doubling funding for after-school programs; expanding child tax credits; expanding the Nurse-Family Partnership, which provides home visits to low-income first-time expectant mothers. And he has consistently opposed the war in Iraq, an issue of <a href="http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/NYfeministsforpeace/" rel="nofollow">huge concern</a> to many American women, vowing to pull all combat troops out of Iraq within 16 months. Clinton has also spoken out against the war and issued a timetable for troop withdrawals, but her vote for the war in 2003 and the perception that she is more hawkish than Obama has made many women, particularly pro-peace feminists, oppose her (At Women&#39;s eNews, <a href="http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3502" rel="nofollow">Allison Stevens takes a close look</a> at this phenomenon).</p>
<p>There are good reasons to pull for either of these candidates, and convincing arguments in each candidate&#39;s favor. What every advocate for women&#39;s rights can agree on, however, is that the next president must end eight years of backsliding on women&#39;s rights and restore women&#39;s issues to their rightful place at the top of his or her presidential agenda.</p>      ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Hillary Clinton Has a Vagina and So Do I</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2007/11/02/hillary-clinton-has-a-vagina-and-so-do-i" />
    <id>http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2007/11/02/hillary-clinton-has-a-vagina-and-so-do-i</id>
    <published>2007-11-12T23:09:15-05:00</published>
    <updated>2007-11-13T09:46:25-05:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Erica C. Barnett</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Leading Voices" />
    <category term="Access to Abortion" />
    <category term="Contraception" />
    <category term="Maternal Health" />
    <category term="Sexuality Education" />
    <category term="STI/HIV/AIDS Prevention" />
    <category term="Women’s Rights" />
    <category term="Hillary Clinton" />
    <category term="Rudy Giuliani" />
    <category term="John Edwards" />
    <category term="John McCain" />
    <category term="Barack Obama" />
    <category term="Mitt Romney" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[  <p>Erica Barnett ponders whether she is obligated to vote for Hillary Clinton based on gender alone.</p>      ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[  <p>Should women support Hillary Clinton? </p>
<p>As a progressive, a feminist, and a chick, my support for <a href="/election-2008/clinton/issues" rel="nofollow">Clinton</a> is presumed. After all, I have a vagina. So does she. I want to see a woman president. She&#39;s a woman. I support choice, reproductive services, expanded women&#39;s health care, pay parity. She says she&#39;ll deliver all those things.</p>
<p>The thing is, though, so does <a href="/election-2008/edwards/issues" rel="nofollow">John Edwards</a>-someone I&#39;ve supported since well before he became John Kerry&#39;s vice-presidential pick in 2004. I like Edwards because he emphasizes poverty, social justice, and ending corporate welfare. Of all the candidates, his positions are most in line with my beliefs. His campaign promises-ending corporate welfare, eliminating tax giveaways to the wealthiest two percent of Americans, implementing a just system of health care for all-are most in line with what I want.</p>
<p>But like almost everyone who is not a straight, white, Christian male, I&#39;ve dreamed of having someone in the White House who looks like me. This is more than simplistic identity politics. Yes, it&#39;s identity politics, but it&#39;s not simple.</p>
<p>We live in a country where identity still, to a huge extent, shapes experience. A black person understands better than me what it&#39;s like to experience racism; a gay person understands what it&#39;s like to be denied basic rights because of your sexuality. And I feel that we need to put someone in the White House who understands that eight years of George W. Bush has devastated women&#39;s status in this country-and who will prioritize putting things right.</p>
<p>Clinton articulated this argument brilliantly October 22 during an appearance in front of the Washington State Democrats at Benaroya Hall. &quot;There are two groups that inspire me to keep going,&quot; Clinton said. &quot;One is women in their 90s who come to my events... They all say something like, &#39;I&#39;m 95 years old. I was born before women could vote in this country and I&#39;m going to live long enough to see a woman in the White House.&#39; The other group is the children who come... I see a parent lean over to a daughter and say, &#39;See, honey? In this country you can be anything you want to be.&#39;&quot;</p>
<p>Cheesy? Trite? Sure. But compelling to many women, including Linda Mitchell, board chair for the Washington State Women&#39;s Political Caucus. In a letter to WPC members, Mitchell said that while Clinton&#39;s positions on health care, the environment, and choice were appealing, &quot;I&#39;m not going to lie: The reality is that for me, it&#39;s time. For the first time we have a strong, viable, qualified woman who CAN be president, who is giving it her all, and who has a real shot at winning. And it&#39;s time for feminists to step up and make it happen.&quot;</p>
<p>Edie Gillis, political director for Progressive Majority of Washington, has a similar take. She says she supports Clinton not for her political platform-&quot;I&#39;m probably a little more liberal&quot;-but because Clinton is a woman. &quot;All of the little differences between the candidates are meaningless to me,&quot; Gillis says. &quot;For me, it&#39;s a precedent-setting thing. I just got married, I&#39;m thinking about starting a family, and if I have a daughter, I want to be able to tell her that there&#39;s a woman in the White House. It would totally change the way we look at the presidency.&quot;</p>
<p>But, again, so would a truly liberal president like John Edwards. After decades of Republican rule, centrism, and triangulation, Edwards promises a return to the progressive tradition on which the Democratic Party was founded. It&#39;s hard to turn my back on that possibility. With Edwards trailing in the polls, Clinton is starting to seduce many who are wary of her centrist politics and corporate contributions-including many feminists.</p>
<p><strong>But not all</strong>-and with good reason.</p>
<p>Although both Clinton and Edwards voted for the Iraq war resolution in 2002, only Edwards has fully recanted, saying bluntly in a <em>Washington Post</em> op-ed: &quot;I was wrong.&quot; His emphasis on poverty and improving the living conditions of all Americans would disproportionately benefit women, who make up the bulk of those living in poverty and earning the minimum wage. He has also been more explicit about which taxes he would raise to keep the deficit under control: He would eliminate Bush&#39;s tax cuts for the richest 2 percent of Americans, those earning more than around $200,000 a year. And he would increase taxes on capital gains and windfall profits taxes on oil companies.</p>
<p>Two prominent feminist bloggers-<a href="/blog/987" rel="nofollow">Amanda Marcotte</a> of <a href="http://www.pandagon.net/" rel="nofollow">Pandagon </a>and Melissa McEwan of <a href="http://www.shakesville.com/" rel="nofollow">Shakespeare&#39;s Sister</a>-have been vocal about their support for Edwards and lack of enthusiasm for Clinton. Back in February, after the Edwards campaign hired both Marcotte and McEwan, the pair came under fire by religious-right bigot Bill Donohue for being &quot;anti-Catholic.&quot; After several days of indecision from the Edwards campaign, both women resigned. However, both Marcotte and McEwan have maintained their support for Edwards, asserting that he better represents the interests of women and progressives.</p>
<p>McEwan argues that because Edwards has daughters and a wife, Elizabeth, whose health-care needs are greater than most Americans&#39;, he &quot;has nearly as much reason to be as keen on women&#39;s issues as... Hillary, who is also no doubt motivated by her daughter&#39;s needs in the future.&quot; She points to a 2005 study by researchers at Yale University that found that male politicians with daughters were actually more likely to focus on &quot;women&#39;s issues&quot; than female candidates. And, McEwan continues, &quot;I&#39;m not going to support a female Democrat just because she&#39;s a woman. Hillary is an especially tough case for me, because I really, really like her as a person... But some of her positions, and particularly her corporatism, rub me completely the wrong way.&quot;</p>
<p><strong>Me, too</strong>-to the point that, until recently, I said I&#39;d only support Clinton if she got the nomination, and only grudgingly. But my old childhood fantasy-the idea that, in my lifetime, a woman could be president-is pushing me slowly in Clinton&#39;s direction.</p>
<p>Putting Hillary Clinton in the White House would change presidential priorities. Yes, Edwards has a pro-choice platform-<a href="/election-2008/obama/issues" rel="nofollow">Barack Obama</a> too. Yes, both believe in expanding family and medical leave and implementing policies that close the pay gap between men and women. In fact, on most issues that matter to women in particular, the three frontrunners hold virtually identical positions.</p>
<p>But although Edwards and Obama may agree with Clinton on many things, I believe that-as a progressive woman-Clinton would be far more likely to prioritize women and children than any candidate who has never been a woman or a mother. No, a President Condoleezza Rice or Elizabeth Dole wouldn&#39;t prioritize women; in fact, they&#39;d probably roll back women&#39;s rights to please the sexist, retrograde, increasingly fundamentalist base of the party they belong to. But Clinton&#39;s a Democrat. Moreover, she&#39;s made women&#39;s issues the cornerstone of her campaign. To say she&#39;ll make them the cornerstone of her presidency isn&#39;t sexism; it&#39;s pragmatism.</p>
<p>Women&#39;s issues matter in this election-perhaps more than at any other time in the last 30 years. During his years as president, George W. Bush has dramatically eroded the rights of women and children at home and abroad. On his first day in office, Bush signed the <a href="/blog/2007/09/18/global-gagging-free-speech-justice-and-womens-health" rel="nofollow">&quot;global gag rule,&quot;</a> denying U.S. aid to any organization that provides abortions or <em>information</em> about abortions (responding to patients&#39; questions about their options, for example)-a decision that has led to the dismantling of reproductive services around the world, and to countless deaths worldwide. He supported the so-called <a href="/blog/2006/11/01/let-s-talk-about-right-wing-activist-courts-the-supreme-court-special-series" rel="nofollow">Partial-Birth Abortion Ban</a>, and appointed two of the Supreme Court justices who subsequently upheld it as the law of the land. He pressured the FDA to bar the over-the-counter sales of <a href="/rhetoric/reckless-rhetoric-on-emergency-contraception" rel="nofollow">emergency contraception</a>, ignoring the recommendations of two FDA panels. He supported legislation that would redefine embryos as &quot;individuals&quot; with the same human rights as living people. He promoted misleading and inaccurate <a href="/fact-v-fiction/comprehensive-sexuality-education-causes-irresponsbile-behaviors" rel="nofollow">abstinence-only education programs</a> whose only effect was to reduce the number of sexually active teens who use birth control. He even appointed an <a href="/blog/2007/01/25/top-ten-reasons-why-you-should-be-terrified-that-dr-eric-keroack-is-in-charge" rel="nofollow">anti-contraception activist</a> to head the federal family-planning office.</p>
<p>Because these are women&#39;s issues, it makes sense that a woman candidate would view them as her issues. And Clinton does. It&#39;s why she has spoken out against countries that ignore human trafficking and forced prostitution. It&#39;s why she sponsored <a href="/policy-watch/prevention-first-act" rel="nofollow">legislation</a> that would make family-planning services, including emergency contraception, more accessible to low-income women and require insurance companies to pay for birth control. It&#39;s why she <a href="/policy-watch/access-to-birth-control-abc-act" rel="nofollow">supported</a> allowing pharmacies to sell EC over the counter (and blocked confirmation of the new FDA chief until it was approved). It&#39;s why she introduced a bill that would make EC available to all women in America&#39;s armed services. It&#39;s why she opposed the noxious &quot;global gag rule.&quot; It&#39;s why she sponsored legislation aimed at ending the pay gap between men and women. It&#39;s why she wants to implement a universal pre-kindergarten program. It&#39;s why <a href="/blog/2007/10/17/realtime-clinton-proposes-expanding-fmla" rel="nofollow">she</a> wants to expand the Family and Medical Leave Act and implement paid maternity-leave programs in every state by 2016. It&#39;s why she wants to require all health-care companies to cover prescription birth control in their plans. It&#39;s why she wants to outlaw &quot;maternal profiling&quot;-the practice in some companies of making pay and promotion decisions based on the assumption that women will have babies.</p>
<p>And it&#39;s why she&#39;s said things like, &quot;I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was fulfill my profession, which I entered before my husband was in public life.&quot;</p>
<p><strong>Republicans lambasted</strong> Clinton for her cookie comment in 1992.</p>
<p>In the 15 years since, they&#39;ve elevated Clinton to a sort of superstar villain, a malevolent bogeywoman who personifies all their darkest fears. At a recent Republican debate in Florida, the Republican presidential hopefuls couldn&#39;t stop talking about Clinton-to the point that they hardly spent any time at all talking about their own campaigns. <a href="/election-2008/romney/issues" rel="nofollow">Mitt Romney</a> said Clinton &quot;hasn&#39;t even run a corner store.&quot; <a href="/election-2008/giuliani/issues" rel="nofollow">Rudy Giuliani</a> said America &quot;can&#39;t afford&quot; a Clinton presidency. And <a href="/election-2008/mccain/issues" rel="nofollow">John McCain</a> made a crack about her proposal to fund a Woodstock museum, saying, &quot;I&#39;m sure it was a cultural and pharmaceutical event.&quot;</p>
<p>In attacking Clinton, her critics on the right reveal how ugly, sexist, and antiwoman they really are. When she speaks in support of expanded civil rights, including adoption rights, for gays and lesbians, they insinuate that she&#39;s gay. When she fails to dress in Armani, à la Nancy Pelosi, they attack her for being &quot;dowdy.&quot; When she doesn&#39;t act appropriately feminine, they call her a &quot;man.&quot; (In fairness, they also call Obama and Edwards women.) When Michelle Obama makes an aside that &quot;if you can&#39;t run your own house, you can&#39;t run the White House,&quot; the right-wing noise machine turns it into a manufactured &quot;catfight.&quot;</p>
<p>When Clinton campaigns aggressively, they compare her to a &quot;hellish housewife&quot; who &quot;just won&#39;t stop nagging you.&quot; When she doesn&#39;t come down hard enough on an issue, they insist that she isn&#39;t aggressive enough to be president. They accuse her of trotting out a manufactured &quot;maternal&quot; side. They even try to make her look like an ice queen for giving away her cat. And finally, when they have nothing else to say, they criticize her laugh-sorry, make that &quot;cackle.&quot; Anyone who inspires this much hysteria among Republicans is all right with me.</p>
<p>On the other hand, some women argue that the very reason I like Clinton is reason enough to ditch her. Many women (and men) describe her as &quot;divisive,&quot; and call her (despite polls that show her with a solid lead among Democrats and some support among Republican women) &quot;the only Democrat who could lose this election.&quot; Sue Evans, media relations coordinator for Pyramid Communications and a Democrat, says that while she doesn&#39;t &quot;think anybody questions Hillary&#39;s ability to do the job, it&#39;s the fear of not getting the White House back after what this country has been through that&#39;s the concern. I want the White House.&quot;</p>
<p>And many smart, liberal women who support candidates other than Clinton make a good point: She isn&#39;t as progressive as some of her fellow frontrunners. She supported the Defense of Marriage Act. She cosponsored the flag-burning amendment. And she supported legislation that some say opens the door for military action in Iran.</p>
<p>Like many liberals, I&#39;m disturbed by all those votes, but here&#39;s where I run into a big &quot;But.&quot; Democrats of late could not be accused of making the perfect the enemy of the good. We nominated John Kerry, for fuck&#39;s sake, and supported him wholeheartedly. So are we holding Clinton to a higher standard, and if so, can we see beyond her gender to her electability and fitness to govern? And are we, as women, holding Clinton to an unattainable standard? As Clinton supporter Mitchell puts it, &quot;If not now, then when? If we&#39;re waiting for the perfect woman candidate, we&#39;re never going to get a woman president.&quot; City Council Member Sally Clark, a recent Clinton convert, thinks Clinton may &quot;get called &#39;shrill,&#39; a &#39;shrew,&#39; and a &#39;bitch&#39; because she&#39;s aggressive and knows what she wants and is really focused. It&#39;s not like she gets up on the platform and rages.&quot;</p>
<p>Feminist writers and political activists have debated themselves to death about whether being a woman means supporting Clinton. I don&#39;t think it does. As a woman, however, I believe Clinton will do right by me on issues that matter to women-which is an entirely different thing than supporting a candidate because of her gender.</p>
<p>I&#39;ll still support Edwards if he gets the nomination-an outcome that seems less and less likely in light of the Clinton juggernaut. But if it&#39;s Clinton, I&#39;ll support her enthusiastically. As a feminist and a woman, I&#39;m ready to see someone who shares my values <em>and</em> my gender in the White House. It&#39;s about time.</p>
<blockquote><p>This article was originally published in <a href="http://www.thestranger.com" rel="nofollow">The Stranger</a>. </p>
</p></blockquote>      ]]></content>
  </entry>
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