Los Angeles Times

Just like her mom, Chelsea Clinton never gets a break

- Ann Friedman is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. She lives in Los Angeles. By Ann Friedman

This week, Variety magazine announced that it would honor former first daughter Chelsea Clinton at its Women in Power luncheon with a “Lifetime achievemen­t award.” The news spread quickly among both Trump supporters and leftleanin­g Clinton detractors who believe that the family’s tonedeafne­ss cost them the election. Chelsea accepting such an award at the tender age of 37 confirmed the “out-of-touch elite” narrative once and for all.

And then “The Hill,” the D.C. outlet that had broken the news, clarified that Chelsea’s honor was not, as initially reported and gleefully reposted, for achievemen­ts over the span of her lifetime. Rather, it was an honor bestowed jointly by Variety and the television network Lifetime for her work promoting better eating habits for children.

It’s a Lifetime achievemen­t award, not a lifetime achievemen­t award.

When it comes to accepting prizes for charitable contributi­ons, Chelsea is in no way an outlier. Everyone in her income bracket has a shelf full of honors. Luncheon ceremonies are a way to publicly thank big-name benefactor­s, get them to show up to the event, and therefore attract other donors and media interest.

Ivanka Trump, for example — just picking someone at random here — is no stranger to vanity awards. She has been honored by organizati­ons such as the European School of Economics and the Diamond Empowermen­t Fund’s GOOD Awards. (Tagline: “Diamonds do good.”)

But Chelsea, like her mother, never gets a break — unlike Ivanka and her father.

The “Lifetime achievemen­t” mistake was an error of capitaliza­tion that became a convenient Internet cudgel at a time when Democrats are focused on resistance, uneasy about class politics, and searching anxiously for the next generation of leaders.

Meanwhile, in the real world, the Trump administra­tion announced that Ivanka would be getting her own White House office and high-level security clearance — despite her father’s insistence that none of his children would enjoy such privileges after his election. Nepotism is a charge that the Trumps find easy to circumnavi­gate. Not so for the Clintons.

Although Chelsea recently tried to quash rumors that she will seek Kirsten Gillibrand’s New York Senate seat if Gillibrand runs for president in 2020, that hasn’t stopped people from reading the tea leaves to predict what she’ll do next.

Chelsea has been a vocal Trump critic, commenting on issues such as infant mortality and #SaveBigBir­d as well as racism in education and affordable healthcare. It has not gone unnoticed: A CNN headline last month read: “Chelsea Clinton embraces her Twitter sass.” She’s writing a children’s book. She’s joined the board of Expedia. The most minor details about her provoke outrage and inspire conspiracy theories.

The studious interest in Chelsea’s next move is understand­able coming from the right, which has always hated the Clintons and no doubt welcomes the distractio­n Chelsea offers from the president’s dismal approval ratings and damning intelligen­ce hearings. Bill, Hillary and Chelsea have long been enthusiasm-boosters for the Republican­s, and they’re reluctant to give them up.

But the laser-focused Chelsea vitriol is perplexing when it comes from the left. Shouldn’t such first-daughter hatred be reserved for Ivanka? Wouldn’t their attention be better spent on potential 2018 and 2020 candidates who have already declared their interest? Aren’t there bigger battles to fight — and aren’t they glad that such a prominent Democratic figure is registerin­g her dissent with the current administra­tion?

It’s a strange time for the Clintons. Trump’s opponents are desperate for Democratic public figures to show some backbone, yet many blame the Clintons’ status as American royalty for the loss of Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and the other states that really should have swung blue. Apparently 2016 is not done with us yet, and not only because the FBI is still investigat­ing the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia.

The Clintons don’t make sense as de facto Democratic leaders anymore, but that doesn’t mean they should just fade away, either. When Hillary recently said in a speech in Pennsylvan­ia that she was “ready to come out of the woods,” I, for one, was happy about it. And while I don’t think she deserves a special award for it, I’m glad Chelsea is speaking out, too. They should be using their public following and personal connection­s to push back against Trump’s policy agenda, and to help build a new wave of leftleanin­g leaders who don’t have family ties to money and power. Such a legacy would be the real lifetime achievemen­t.

Chelsea Clinton still faces intense scrutiny from both the left and the right. Aren’t there bigger battles for us to fight?

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