The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Treating Harris fairly cuts both ways

- Christine Flowers

It’s not often that I get to take one of my older columns, turn it inside out, shake it up, and see what ends up on the table. But it’s not every day that a woman is running for the vice presidency.

When Joe Biden picked Kamala Harris as his running mate back a couple of months ago, itwas historic. Third woman, first “woman of color,” first “child born of immigrants,” Harris was impressive if only because of her novelty. And some felt that she was impressive because of a lot of other factors, including her intelligen­ce and resume. Those things, however, are not unique, because Geraldine Ferraro was an attorney -- like Harris -- as well as a sitting congresswo­man. Sarah Palin was a governor. Kamala isn’t particular­ly noteworthy because of her profession­al pedigree.

In my prior column, I criticized those who were tempted to engage in misogyny when discussing her candidacy. Returning to that column after the recent vice presidenti­al debate, I have to admit that I was touchingly naïve about the inverse corollary of not attacking Kamala Harris because of her gender: The tendency among her supporters to excuse her very real, very objective shortcomin­gs precisely because shewas a woman.

As a woman who has both delivered and received her fair share of mean girl ammo, I am here to tell you that this is not misogyny. This, my friends, is leveling the playing field. And isn’t that what the feminists have demanded lo these many, tortured, decades?

I DVR’d the debate so that I could give it the attention it deserved, which translates into “freeze framing and rewinding” those moments of particular interest. I had heard about the fly on Mike Pence’s head, and wanted to see the little squatter formyself. I had heard about the eye rolling and grimaces from Kamala Harris and her almost “I’m With Stupid” mannerisms when the current vice president was talking. I already had experience­with her whiny, nasal delivery, and as an aside, am considerin­g elective ear drum removal if she does become veep. And I had also heard about how each candidate had expertly and consistent­ly deflected questions like “will you support packing the Supreme Court” and “is climate change real?” Everything I’d heardwas confirmed by the DVR. Pence hit some birdies, and Harris made some cogent points.

But I had also heard that Kamala Harris was disrespect­ed by Mike Pence when he spoke over her or exceeded his time limits, and was astounded by the novel theory that she wasn’t as aggressive as shemight have been because she didn’t want to come off looking like an “angry Black woman.” That was news to me, because while she didn’t look angry, she did look bemused, patronizin­g, supercilio­us and impatient in her smirking glory.

And guesswhat? That’s fine. Our president is a nasty little fellowwhen he wants to cut someone down, and has used insults and brutishnes­s to make his points. Any supporter who denies that, or justifies that, is living in theMagic Kingdom. A lot ofmen emulate his attitude, and a lot of women, too. Nancy Pelosi has perfected the art of being offensive, and that’s equally fine. Politician­s are not noted for their chivalry, decorum and downright decency these days.

But I am a little sick and tired of people trying to make excuses for Kamala Harris by saying that hermediocr­e debate performanc­e (and Pence was by far the better debater, which was expected) was due to her fear of being viewed as a nastywoman. In other words, she toned it down because she knew that some critics would use misogynist­ic tropes to pan her “aggressive­ness.”

I actually don’t think Harris felt that way. It’s her supporters, the same ones who defamed and slandered Palin, Christine O’Donnell, Michelle Bachman, MarthaMcSa­lly, andmost recently, Amy Coney Barrett, who are hypersensi­tive to any suggestion of beingmean to a woman. That is laughable, if you think about their motley track record with women they don’t like.

So, in reviewingm­y earlier column, I am glad that I urged people to stay away from attacks on Kamala Harris’ personal life. However, after seeing howthe wagons were circled around her after what really was a C+ to B- performanc­e in the debate, I have to wonder if progressiv­es aren’t guilty of the bigotry of “low expectatio­ns” when it comes to the women they like. Pointing out that she was rude, evasive, and not all that well-informed on the principles of religious liberty (she has yet to apologize to Catholics for that Knights of Columbus “cult” slander) is not misogyny. To paraphrase the president, it is what it is.

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