Global Times

PANTSUIT NATION

Ve A space for progressiv­e women and their allies in divided America

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The secret Facebook group sprung up in the final days of the 2016 presidenti­al election, bringing together Hillary Clinton supporters who simply wanted to champion their candidate among fellow enthusiast­s.

Now numbering just under 4 million members, Pantsuit Nation is a space for progressiv­e women and their allies to share personal stories – many uplifting, others heartbreak­ing – in a nation divided under President Donald Trump.

“It’s easy to get hopeless as supporters of Secretary Clinton, as liberals and Democrats, ( and) to feel alone,” founder Libby Chamberlai­n told AFP.

“We have so many members who live in communitie­s or families where they don’t have like- minded individual­s... they can’t go next door to commiserat­e with the neighbor about what’s happening at the national level, but they can go to this space online.”

The 33- year- old runs Pantsuit Nation from a spare bedroom in her home in Brooklin, Maine, a coastal town of 800 residents primarily known for boat- building.

She started the Facebook group on October 20, 2016, while working two part- time jobs at nearby high schools. Her idea was to encourage Clinton supporters to wear pantsuits – the former Democratic secretary of state’s go- to outfit – to the polls on November 8.

Overnight, the group ballooned to 24,000 people as the members added friends, who then added their friends. By November 5, Pantsuit Nation had grown to 1 million members, reaching 3.1 million by the end of Election Day.

Photos of exuberant pantsuit- clad women at polling sites quickly gave

way to posts brimming

with anger and despair following Trump’s electoral win.

These days, Pantsuit Nation’s content centers around Trump’s conservati­ve agenda, with members describing the real- life effects of his moves to restrict immigratio­n, tear up healthcare laws or remove protection­s for transgende­r people.

“I think there is a hunger in this country for personal stories that humanize the impact of policy that is happening at the national, state and local levels,” Chamberlai­n said.

“It feels immediate and human and it allows people to hold onto something,” she said.

‘ Double whammy’

Darla Barar, a 30- year- old marketing copywriter in Austin, Texas, wrote on Pantsuit Nation about her late- term abortion and voiced opposition to a measure in Congress seeking to define human life as beginning at fertilizat­ion.

“This bill really hit us hard because the wording is such that it would essentiall­y put a ban on IVF procedures as well as abortion,” said Barar. “It was a double whammy for us.” She was expecting twins, conceived through IVF, when a scan at the midpoint of her pregnancy revealedl d one of fh her daughters had grave issues including a neural tube defect that was allowing brain matter to leak out of her skull.

If the baby she and her husband Peter had already named Catherine survived delivery, she would have been severely disabled, if not a vegetable. Meanwhile, the growth of Catherine’s amniotic sac was restrictin­g that of her twin, Olivia, putting both babies in danger.

Barar ultimately decided to abort Catherine to give Olivia a better chance of being born healthy.

“On June 22 at 3: 30 pm, the doctor let us see and hear Cate one last time. I remember she danced for us. And then, guided by ultrasound, the doctor injected a medication into Cate’s heart, stopping it. When they checked for a heartbeat 30 minutes later, the silence was deafening. And then they found Olivia’s strong beating heart and we cried. We cried for Olivia’s survival and for Cate’s loss, our loss, Olivia’s loss,” she wrote on Pantsuit Nation.

“Ours is the story of late- term abortion. We are the issue that pro- birthers debate without knowing, without having been there.”

Olivia was born healthy and is now five months old.

Future impact?

Chamberlai­n, who said she has not profited from Pantsuit Nation, is in the process of establishi­ng it as a nonp profit group, giving it a structure to grow outside of Facebook. She hopes to hire three o or four employees to replace so some of her 65 volunteers, who,w in addition to runningni the Facebook page and otheroth social media platforms, alsoals would support 20 local PantsuitPa­n Nation chapters thattha formed organicall­y postelecti­on.elec Chamberlai­nC is also editing a Pantsuit Nation book, due out on May 9, which has drawn a fair amount of criticism by some who allege that she is selling the stories of others. She defends herself, saying the people featured are enthusiast­ic about being included and that her ultimate goal, which she says may be “naive and impossible,” is for the book to find its way to people who may never be a part of the Facebook group. “I want to create change and facilitate dialogue and push Pantsuit Nation as far as I can in terms of changing future elections,” she said. It’s a crucial time for Pantsuit Nation, as keeping grassroot organizati­ons going can be very challengin­g, said Linda Fowler, a professor of government at Dartmouth College. “Telling those stories is important and a lot of people have those stories. They can continue to do that but that won’t have political impact unless it’s accompanie­d by an agenda and a strategy for accomplish­ing specific political goals,” she said.

 ?? Photo: IC, Photo: AFP ?? Hundreds women dressed in pantsuits held a flash mob on November 8 to show their support to Hillary Clinton. Above: Pantsuit Nation founder Libby Chamberlai­n
Photo: IC, Photo: AFP Hundreds women dressed in pantsuits held a flash mob on November 8 to show their support to Hillary Clinton. Above: Pantsuit Nation founder Libby Chamberlai­n
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