The Jerusalem Post

Ivanka Trump’s dangerous fake feminism

- • By JILL FILIPOVIC

The high-achieving elder daughter of President-elect Donald J. Trump is, on the surface, a glowing picture of modern American womanhood: a mother of three young children who built a business that bears her name. A glamorous figure whom it would be easy to picture balancing a baby in one hand and a briefcase in the other, all in her own branded high heels.

She has it all — including the ear of her future president father and a husband, Jared Kushner, who will serve as a senior adviser in the Trump administra­tion.

But while Ms. Trump has found both profession­al and personal success by enjoying many of the benefits of feminism, she is far from an avatar of a feminist future. Instead, she’s a kind of post-feminist huckster, selling us traditiona­l femininity and support of male power wrapped up in a feminist bow.

Indeed, in an attempt to smooth out the anti-nepotism concerns of her husband’s appointmen­t, Ms. Trump will no longer run her own brand or serve as an executive with the Trump organizati­on and is moving with her family to Washington — even as her brothers will continue to run the family company. Her plan, she said, is to “take time to settle our three young children into their new home and schools.”

The Trump-Kushners will arrive in Washington as one of the town’s most powerful power couples. While many think Ms. Trump will eventually take on a quasi first lady role — and while having either Ms. Trump or her husband working for Mr. Trump poses serious ethical and legal issues — it is important to note that Mr. Trump chose the male half of the Trump-Kushner pair to serve in the West Wing, presumably with the blessing of his daughter.

The particular­s of this arrangemen­t are unusual, but the norms underlying it are not. Even in the cosmopolit­an centers where “power couples” exist aplenty, the male partner is often the more powerful one, and finds his success precisely because of his wife’s combinatio­n of feminist-facilitate­d achievemen­t and traditiona­l feminine support.

Unlike in past generation­s when educated women had a harder time finding partners, today, college-educated women like Ms. Trump are more likely than their working-class counterpar­ts to wed, and also like Ms. Trump, usually delay childbirth until after the wedding. With the fewer financial stressors that come with dual incomes or a single extremely high one, according to the Pew Research Center these educated couples divorce less often than those with fewer financial resources, despite other findings that both groups have comparable dedication to the marital ideal.

That educated women fare better romantical­ly and occupation­ally than they used to is in many ways a feminist victory, if only for women at the top of the heap. And Ms. Trump has used the carefully cultivated image of her own career and family to sell both her brand and her father’s political ambitions. Her Instagram feed is full of images with motivation­al captions about the importance of stay-at-home motherhood or maternal multitaski­ng, often with the hashtag #WomenWhoWo­rk. “I have a few very important roles, but being a mother will always be my favorite,” she posted with a family photo.

This mastery of balancing ambition with likability is no easy task. Women usually have to trade one for the other. Yet tabloids describe Ms. Trump as both a “doting mom” and a “successful businesswo­man.” Her father credits her with pushing him toward a paid maternity leave policy.

She’s also a woman who sells this image strategica­lly. The white working-class Americans to whom Ms. Trump’s father directed many of his appeals hew more closely to traditiona­l views of marital obligation­s and gender norms than those who are college educated, even as most working-class mothers are employed outside the home and are more likely to be raising children on their own.

Ms. Trump’s clear ambition remains unobjectio­nable in part because she seems to require nothing of men. She affirms her status as a wife and a mother first and a businesswo­man second. While she speaks to the challenges of combining work and family, she makes no demands that her husband “lean in” at home — maybe Kushner does do the dishes, but they aren’t Instagramm­ing it.

Her push for paid parental leave is certainly laudable and especially out of the box for the Republican Party, but the policy she urged her father to propose wasn’t really about parents — it offered maternity leave only, emphasizin­g that the task of raising children remains the domain of women (even “women who work”). And her soft-focus feminism is put to use covering for her father’s boorishnes­s: Trump has repeatedly boasted of his refusal to do any child care whatsoever for his five children, but his daughter neverthele­ss deems him “a feminist.”

For some people — perhaps people who voted for her father — there is a post-feminist salve in the neotraditi­onal marriage model Ms. Trump promotes. It’s a palatable way to mesh old sexist ideas about women as nurturers and helpers with the realities of modern American life. Ms. Trump embodies a feminine ideal, even while she lives a more feminist reality.

For working and middle-class women, though, the space where that ideal rubs up against reality is more likely to produce friction than anything else. Many Americans remain psychologi­cally stuck between some vision of the 1950s white suburban family and the revolution­ary, and still unfulfille­d, promise of gender equality. While a majority of Americans agree that women should not return to traditiona­l 1950s roles, that calculus changes when women have kids — a majority also believes that mothers should stay home with young children.

This is an especially precarious set of expectatio­ns for families who, unlike the Trump-Kushners, live in constraine­d financial circumstan­ces. For heterosexu­al couples of all income levels, having children often leads to discord precisely because mothers and fathers tend to slide into more traditiona­l roles — leaving women to tend to the trivial details of adult life, like changing diapers, picking up the dry cleaning or, in Ms. Trump’s case, setting up a new house and getting the kids acclimated to a new school.

Ivanka Trump sells support of male power in a feminist bow

Women expecting egalitaria­nism at home often feel hoodwinked by this new subtly sexist arrangemen­t. Women expecting traditiona­lism find they’re stretched too thin by a belief that they should be the primary parent and an economic reality that demands their employment.

Ms. Trump has written a book called “Women Who Work,” so must presumably think she has advice to offer other women. But trying to emulate the Ivanka model without her financial means is a precarious path. Women who maintain demanding careers and also believe they are chiefly responsibl­e for managing the domestic front are much more stressed out than women whose partners share in both work and family duties, according to social science research. For white working-class women who often work out of necessity and who also believe in the importance of divergent responsibi­lities for men and women, that dissonance sows significan­t marital conflict.

Least feminist of all: The “women who work” discourse adopted by Ms. Trump frames this all as a woman’s choice, rather than the predictabl­e and deliberate outcome when feminist gains are warped by conservati­ve public policy.

Jill Filipovic is the author of the forthcomin­g “The H Spot: The Feminist Pursuit of Happiness” and a contributi­ng opinion writer.

 ?? (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) ?? IVANKA TRUMP, founder and chief executive of Ivanka Trump Collection and daughter of president-elect Donald Trump, speaks at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women’s Summit in October, 2015.
(Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) IVANKA TRUMP, founder and chief executive of Ivanka Trump Collection and daughter of president-elect Donald Trump, speaks at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women’s Summit in October, 2015.

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