The Day

Stop insulting women who supported Trump

- By Gary aBerNatHy

At a recent Hillsboro Rotary Club meeting, I told Karen Faust that I had learned she voted for Donald Trump because her husband pressured her to do so. Her husband, Jim, a farmer, happened to be sitting beside her as her guest on Rotary’s Ag Day, and they both rolled their eyes.

“Yeah, right,” he said as they laughed. “Just try telling her what to do.”

Like every other woman I know who voted for Trump, Faust is strong-willed and independen­t. She holds a master’s degree in education. She was the first 4-H Extension agent in neighborin­g Adams County, and has been a program manager for Jobs for Ohio’s Graduates and a licensed profession­al clinical counselor. She serves as president of the Southern Ohio Pregnancy Center board, a pro-life organizati­on that supports women facing unplanned pregnancie­s. Last year, she was inducted into the Highland County Women’s Hall of Fame.

But according to people such as Hillary Clinton and actress Sandra Bernhard, of the 52 percent of all white women who voted for Trump, the married ones, such as Faust, did so out of spousal pressure or just plain ignorance.

During a recent appearance in India, Clinton said, “We do not do well with white men and we don’t do well with married, white women. And part of that is an identifica­tion with the Republican Party, and a sort of ongoing pressure to vote the way that your husband, your boss, your son, whoever, believes you should.”

Similarly, Bernhard said recently, “I think it’s being either under the thumb of your husband or, for the election, it was being so offended by Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton’s legacy that you turned on her . ... A lot of women have compromise­d, given in.”

For many people, the only legitimate definition of a thoughtful woman is someone willing to march wearing a vagina-themed hat, pledge allegiance to the pro-choice cause and support only Democrats for public office. If a woman voted for Trump, she most certainly did so because her domineerin­g husband made her do it.

Yet despite decades of attempts to define “real women” using the criteria of feminism and progressiv­e politics, many women still march to their own drummers. Thousands of strong, smart, independen­t women in Highland County, Ohio, voted for Trump for president, as they did across the nation. I don’t have to venture further than my own family to identify accomplish­ed women who enthusiast­ically supported Trump, including my mother, a retired postmaster; my sister, a successful small business owner and city council member; my wife, a journalist; and my daughter, a teacher with a master’s degree in education.

Is it possible people such as Clinton and Bernhard are oblivious to how insulting their comments are to the millions of women who chose the Trump-Pence ticket? Or do they simply not care?

The left seems perplexed by women who support Trump, as though it is aberrant behavior in need of therapy. Until they come to grips with the reality that women who are intelligen­t, independen­t and Republican do not represent an abnormalit­y or a sign of oppression, their dime-store psychoanal­ysis will continue to create more of a chasm than a bridge.

Another married white woman, Canadian country singer Shania Twain, was recently shamed for saying that if she were eligible to vote in the United States, she would have voted for Trump. She soon apologized.

One of Twain’s biggest hits was “Man! I Feel Like a Woman,” but that was in 1997. Two decades later, Twain may well be quietly contemplat­ing just how narrow the definition of womanhood has become.

Gary Abernathy is publisher and editor of the Times-Gazette in Hillsboro, Ohio.

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