The Guardian (USA)

Wall Street Journal denounced after ‘sexist’ article calls Jill Biden ‘kiddo’

- Ed Pilkington in New York

The Wall Street Journal has come under a torrent of denunciati­on for publishing a “sexist” opinion article that calls Jill Biden, the first lady-in-waiting, “kiddo”, and questions her right to use “Dr” in front of her name.

The article, written by a former adjunct professor at Northweste­rn University Joseph Epstein, purports to offer Biden “a bit of advice”. Opening on the provocativ­e note of calling her “Madame (sic) First Lady – Mrs Biden – Jill – kiddo”, the author goes on to recommend that she drop the honorific of “Dr” before her name.

“‘Dr Jill Biden’ sounds and feels fraudulent, not to say a touch comic,” Epstein writes. He justifies his condescens­ion towards her title on grounds that it referred to an “Ed D – a doctor of education, earned at the University of Delaware”.

On Sunday night, Jill Biden tweeted: “Together, we will build a world where the accomplish­ments of our daughters will be celebrated, rather than diminished.”

Biden’s director of communicat­ions Elizabeth Alexander denounced the piece as “sexist and shameful”. Michael

LaRosa, Biden’s spokespers­on in the transition team, went further and demanded an apology, saying the newspaper should be embarrasse­d by the “sexist attack”.

On Sunday evening, the Journal’s editorial page editor defended Epstein’s piece, saying the criticism of a piece about a “relatively minor issue” was “overwrough­t” and accusing the Biden camp of media of politicisi­ng the matter.

Over the weekend, a groundswel­l of criticism built into a tidal wave over the haughtines­s of the piece and its sexism and racism, such as where the author suggests as a simile for rarity the phrase: “Rarer than a contempora­ry university honorary-degree list not containing an African American woman”.

Hillary Clinton put her reaction most pithily: “Her name is Dr Jill Biden. Get used to it.”

Other prominent public figures also waded in. Bernice King, daughter of Martin Luther King, tweeted at Biden saying: “My father was a non-medical doctor. And his work benefited humanity greatly. Yours does, too.”

Doug Emhoff, who is destined to become “second gentleman” as the spouse of the vice president-elect Kamala Harris, said that Biden had earned her degrees through “hard work and pure grit… This story would never have been written about a man.”

Perhaps the harshest criticism came from Epstein’s old employer, Northweste­rn University, which tartly noted that he hasn’t taught there in almost 20 years. In a statement, the English department said it rejected his opinion on Biden “as well as the diminishme­nt of anyone’s duly-earned degrees in any field, from any university”.

Epstein’s profile on the Northweste­rn website, where he had been listed as an “emeritus lecturer”, was apparently later taken down, the journalist David Gura reported on Twitter.

 ?? Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images ?? Jill Biden arrives to join operation gratitude to assemble care packages for deployed US troops, on 10 December in Washington DC.
Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images Jill Biden arrives to join operation gratitude to assemble care packages for deployed US troops, on 10 December in Washington DC.

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