The Timaru Herald

Standing up for Daddy

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Some among us may feel sympathy for his daughter, Ivanka, drawing jeers, groans and laughter when she sought to highlight her father’s empowermen­t credential­s to a Berlin conference on women.

At times like this she must realise with mounting clarity the extent to which he is an internatio­nal leper of a leader.

She reminded her openly scornful audience of the thousands of women who had worked with and for him.

Perhaps not so much the 15 or so who have accused him of sexual assault and sexual harassment. Liars all, he would have us add.

Nor those women among his campaign staff who toiled away alongside men who were paid onethird more than them.

Nor those outside his own personal payroll but working in the field of, say, women’s reproducti­ve rights. Funding for which he has cut.

Ivanka has found her father personally empowering. ‘‘There was no difference for me and my brothers’’.

Well, perhaps that slight difference that emerged when, admiring her curvature, he said if she wasn’t his daughter ‘‘perhaps I’d be dating her’’.

Trump’s most famous comment on women and power is that when you’re a star you can grab them by the genitals.

It’s not uncommon for family members of political leaders to struggle to defend, or even react appropriat­ely to, the misdeeds of their loved ones. There was something profoundly unimpressi­ve about the way Hillary Clinton, as First Lady, tried to get folksy about her husband’s infideliti­es with such supposedly chucklesom­e lines as: ‘‘He’s a hard dog to keep on the porch’’.

Ivanka makes a weak case on behalf of her father. There are reasons for that and they reflect badly on him, rather than her. She would be wiser to remember the extent to which, justifiabl­y or not, her family wealth can work against her message. As Arwa Mahdawi wrote in The Guardian, she is a wonderful example of what women can achieve with just perseveran­ce, tenacity and millions of inherited dollars.

She speaks of trying to be a force for ‘‘incrementa­l positive change’’ for women in the US economy. The most useful thing she could do is work on her Dad.

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