Dayton Daily News

Politics isn’t pretty, but some politician­s turn heads

- Frank Bruni

At a Beto O’Rourke rally near Dallas shortly before the midterms, Sonia Qutob, 41, turned to her friend and asked what was clearly the most pressing question about the candidate.

“Do you think,” she said, “that he needs a second wife?”

O’Rourke seems plenty happy with the first. But a fangirl can dream. At the rally immediatel­y preceding the one where Qutob swooned, dozens mobbed O’Rourke and clamored for selfies. The passions were clearly more than political.

O’Rourke and Andrew Gillum soared to fame and impressive vote totals in, respective­ly, Texas and Florida because they were eloquent, energetic and empathetic counterpoi­nts to their Republican rivals and to Donald Trump. Also, they’re hunks. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York became the youngest woman ever elected to the House on the strength of her story, the purity of her vision and the smarts of her strategy.

But her celebrity isn’t hindered by her gorgeousne­ss. She has nearly 825,000 followers on Instagram — more, Politico recently noted, than Nancy Pelosi and Paul Ryan combined.

There’s obviously ample room in politics for people of all strata of comeliness, as any gallery of presidenti­al portraits or group photo of members of Congress shows.

But many candidates’ personas are inseparabl­e from their looks, whether those looks cast them as bookish, nurturing, approachab­le or, yes, hot. And in politics, as in much else, hot helps.

“From a very early age, we’re drawn to more attractive faces — even babies prefer that,” Deborah Rhode, a Stanford University law professor, told me. She’s the author of “The Beauty Bias: The Injustice of Appearance in Life and Law.” It explains that better-looking defendants fare better with juries.

Rhode mentioned John F. Kennedy as a prime example from the past of a politician assisted by his appearance. She mentioned Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, as an example from the present.

Nancy Etcoff, an evolutiona­ry psychologi­st who teaches at Harvard Medical School and wrote a book titled “Survival of the Prettiest,” said that there was almost certainly more forgivenes­s in the days of Abraham Lincoln, who, she noted, “considered himself homely.”

Etcoff asked: “Would he be elected now? I would hope the answer is yes. But it’s a real question.”

So is whether there’s such a thing as too attractive, at least for women. If you’re a dazzler, Rhode said, “You have more difficulty being taken seriously.”

Ocasio-Cortez has already felt the sting of this.

When it comes to looks, as to so much else, women in politics are asked to thread a needle. They mustn’t ignore their appearance. But they also mustn’t flaunt it.

Men get into trouble mainly if their physical vanity becomes much too obvious, as President Emmanuel Macron of France learned when he was mocked for spending $30,000 on makeup during his first three months in office.

O’Rourke sidesteppe­d that problem by leaning into the Texas heat and sweating copiously through his shirts. He was a proud human sponge. But can you get away with being that soggy if you aren’t that pretty?

He writes for the New York Times.

President Trump did defy history in the 2018 midterm elections. While his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, lost 63 House seats and six Senate seats in his first midterms, Trump held the GOP’s House losses to just over half of that and bolstered the GOP majority in the Senate. The combinatio­n of a Senate map that heavily favored Republican­s, and Trump’s success in turning out his 2016 base, produced a red wall that held up pretty well against the blue wave.

There are also warning signs in the results that Trump should not ignore. While the working-class voters Trump won in 2016 turned out in droves on Election Day, Republican­s were decimated

He writes for the Washington Post.

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