Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Why the case against Willis feels familiar to Black women

- By Clyde Mcgrady and Katie Glueck

Tangala Hollis-Palmer felt a sense of pride when she learned that Fani Willis, the district attorney of Fulton County, Georgia, and one of the nation's few elected Black female prosecutor­s, would lead the election interferen­ce case against former President Donald Trump.

But that pride would be tempered by dismay as news emerged of Willis' personal relationsh­ip with a fellow prosecutor, Nathan Wade, an outside lawyer she hired to help run the case. Hollis-Palmer, a Black, 40-year-old attorney from Mississipp­i, is mostly upset at critics trying, she said, to discredit Willis. At first, she was skeptical of the allegation­s. But when Willis herself conceded the relationsh­ip, Hollis reserved some disappoint­ment for the prosecutor who should have used a “little more discretion and a little better judgment,” she said.

Trump and several codefendan­ts are calling Willis' hiring of Wade a conflict of interest and want Willis and Wade disqualifi­ed, potentiall­y upending a critical case against the former president and doing grievous damage to Willis' reputation.

“We just have to be so careful when we are in these positions to not give people the ammunition to come after us,” HollisPalm­er said.

On Thursday, a Georgia judge is scheduled to hear evidence on the relationsh­ip between the two prosecutor­s.

A defense lawyer for one of Trump's co-defendants argues that Willis' hiring of Wade is a “form of selfdealin­g” that provides Willis with incentive to keep the case going.

Wade has earned more than $650,000 since his hiring in 2021 while also spending money on joint vacations he has taken with Willis, issues that will be central to the hearing this week. Willis has said that the costs of joint personal travel have been “divided roughly evenly” between her and Wade.

Interviews with a dozen Black women at varying stages of their careers found them to be painfully conflicted about Willis' situation and her treatment in the public eye.

To many, there is something galling about watching Trump and his allies attack Willis over a consensual romantic relationsh­ip when he has faced accusation­s of sexual misconduct and assault. Trump was recently ordered by a Manhattan jury to pay $83.3 million to the writer E. Jean Carroll for defaming her after she accused him of a decades-old rape. A civil jury also found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll.

Some lamented Willis' conduct as a mistake, but not one that should remove her from the case against Trump. Others, thinking about their own experience­s in the workplace, suggested another concern: They feel that Black women are held to a different standard and that Willis should have known that her identity, along with the enormous political stakes of the case, would create a white-hot spotlight on her personal conduct.

“I can't sit in judgment of her as a human being, but I can say, in terms of her role as a public prosecutor, yeah, she showed bad judgment,” said Donna Brazile, a former chair of the Democratic National Committee, adding that she had always kept a clear separation between her own personal and profession­al life with “a bright red line.”

She said Willis faced “vitriol” and “racial animus” as a woman of color in a position of power.

But, Brazile said, some of the attention is to be expected for a high-profile person involved in a highprofil­e case, especially one that concerns a former president of the United States.

“She is undergoing public scrutiny — she's a public official,” Brazile said. “Comes with the territory.”

Jeff DiSantis, a spokespers­on for Willis' office, declined to comment.

The discussion­s about race, gender and Willis' quandary have played out in group chats with text messages flying back and forth, in kitchen table discussion­s between couples and at student hangouts.

“We deal with the sexism as well as the racism,” Hollis-Palmer said. “But sometimes the sexism is a little worse.” She practices law with her husband and said that when they walk into a courtroom, people automatica­lly assume that he's the lead counsel. When publicly discussing Willis' predicamen­t, some women of color have tried to walk a tightrope of empathy and anger.

Those conflictin­g feelings played out during a recent discussion on the daytime talk show “The View.”

“I'm very pissed off, too,” said co-host Ana NavarroCár­denas, who is a Nicaraguan American. “Because when you are a woman of color in such a high-profile position, you know that the scrutiny that's going to befall you is greater than on anybody else, and she needed to have kept her house clean.”

Co-host Sunny Hostin, who is Black and Latina, chimed in, “Your stuff cannot stink,” before adding that she agreed with Navarro-Cárdenas.

In some cases, the concerns about Willis' treatment are balanced with uneasiness over how her behavior could jeopardize a potential Trump conviction.

“My initial reaction was that it seemed to be kind of a halfhearte­d attempt to get the entire case thrown out, which I thought was just an incredible stretch,” said Faith Udobang, 25, president of the University of Chicago Black Law Student Associatio­n.

But now she is worried that the misconduct accusation­s against Willis could delay the outcome until after the election.

“I believe the American people deserve to have adequate informatio­n once they go to the polls,” she said.

Some legal observers have said the attempts to disqualify Willis rest on shaky legal ground. They say the allegation­s against Willis have nothing to do with whether or not Trump interfered with the state's election in 2020, and conspired to subvert the will of Georgia voters. But lawyers for defendants could use the misconduct allegation­s to undermine perception­s about the fairness of the prosecutio­n by calling into question Willis' judgment.

In a January address at one of Atlanta's oldest Black churches, Willis suggested that her critics are playing the “race card.” She defended her hiring of Wade and said that his “impeccable credential­s” were only being questioned because they are both Black.

“Obviously, it was in somebody's interest to bring her down,” said former Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, D-Ill., the first Black woman to serve in the Senate.

“The fact that she's a high-profile Black woman just means that she's a bigger target.”

Others are less sure that race or gender are central to fueling the accusation­s, but instead argue that anyone in Willis' position would be the target of personal attacks from Trump.

Luci Walker, a 54-yearold data analyst from Decatur, Georgia, said she doesn't believe Willis' race or gender had played a role.

“It would be some reason or another, but I think they might just be looking for excuses to get out of it, or to get her off the case,” Walker said.

Leah D. Daughtry, a veteran Democratic strategist, said that the focus on Willis' personal life was, in some ways, in keeping with the kind of attention that follows many in public life. But there is an added complicati­on for Black women, she said.

“There are people who will be emboldened and invigorate­d by the fact that she's a Black woman and make it, then, their business to go further and farther than they may have gone,” she said. It is “easy to argue that white men are not often held to the same scrutiny.”

She pointed to the many accusation­s of misconduct Trump has faced, including from Carroll.

“No one made that a disqualifi­er,” she said of the current Republican presidenti­al front-runner. “But for Fani Willis, the fact that she's in a consensual relationsh­ip with another adult person somehow makes her disqualifi­ed, or unqualifie­d, to continue the work that she's been doing. In that sense there's a double standard, absolutely.”

Glynda C. Carr, the leader of Higher Heights for America, an organizati­on focused on engaging Black women in politics, said she had been raised with the idea that Black women must be “twice” as good to navigate challengin­g dynamics in the workplace.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is seen in Atlanta last year.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is seen in Atlanta last year.

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