Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Democrats puzzle over whether a woman will beat Trump

Distinct narratives come to surface

- By Lisa Lerer and Susan Chira

Joyce Cusack would love to see a woman as president in her lifetime. But she is not sure it should happen in 2020.

“Are we ready in 2020? I really don’t think we are,” said Ms. Cusack, 75, a former Democratic National Committee member from Florida. Too many Americans may not want to “take another chance” on a female candidate, Ms. Cusack said, after Hillary Clinton was met with mistrust and even hostility in swing states.

But Andy McGuire, former chairwoman of the Iowa Democratic Party, sees a different reality after a record number of Democratic women won races in the 2018 midterms. “I’d go back to this last election — who won?” said Ms. McGuire, who, as a superdeleg­ate like Ms. Cusack, supported Ms. Clinton at the 2016 convention. “Who had the excitement? Who had all the volunteers and power behind them? It was women.”

As the 2020 primary competitio­n gets underway with Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s entry into the race, and with several other women likely to be early contenders, two competing narratives have emerged about the possibilit­y of another woman leading the Democratic ticket, interviews with more than three dozen party officials, voters and pollsters showed.

The year of the woman and the midterm gains that followed electrifie­d Democrats, who have eagerly promoted themselves as the party of diversity.

That success has inspired some of the most powerful women in politics to consider running for president. And it has boosted expectatio­ns that the political calculus for women has changed in the past two years, and that gender could become an asset, even in a presidenti­al contest.

Ms. Clinton, after all, won the popular vote by almost 3 million.

Yet at a time of ascendancy for women in the party, there’s a lingering doubt in some quarters about whether there is a risk involved in nominating a woman to take on President Donald Trump, whom Democrats fervently want to unseat.

The specter of Ms. Clinton’s defeat in 2016 still haunts some Democratic officials, voters and activists. There is widespread recognitio­n that women in politics are held to a different standard than men on qualities like likability, and toughness, and that voters have traditiona­lly been more reluctant to elect women as executives than as legislator­s.

Some women see bias in the excitement surroundin­g a potential presidenti­al run by Beto O’Rourke, the Texan who energized the left in a losing Senate bid, while Stacey Abrams is not mentioned as a possibilit­y even though she had a much narrower loss for governor of Georgia.

“There’s a real tension,” said Neera Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress and a former policy adviser to Ms. Clinton. “On one hand, women are leading the resistance and deserve representa­tion. But on the other side, there’s a fear that if misogyny beat Clinton, it can beat other women.”

Much of the debate is grounded in the question of whether Ms. Clinton’s loss represente­d a rejection of women as president, or of one specific woman. How significan­t a role sexism played in Ms. Clinton’s defeat is difficult to separate from the other liabilitie­s that hindered her campaign. Ms. Clinton struggled to deal with decades of political baggage and a Republican attack machine that cast her as aloof, elitist and disconnect­ed. Her reliance on a tight-knit inner circle isolated her from tough political challenges, and she struggled to win over working class white women and men.

If Democrats nominate a woman in 2020, she will most likely face an onslaught of gender-based attacks from Mr. Trump, who did not hesitate in 2016 to mock the physical appearance and stamina of his female opponents. As the Republican nominee Mr. Trump carried more vulnerabil­ities on gender than any other modern candidate, facing allegation­s of sexual assault and harassment and having a record of lewd comments about women.

Still, exit polls indicated that a majority of white women voted for Mr. Trump, helping him seal crucial Electoral College victories in traditiona­lly Democratic states like Pennsylvan­ia and Michigan.

As Democrats look toward 2020, the conversati­on is particular­ly relevant because the 2020 primary season could prove to be as historic as the 2008 and 2016 races; in those years, Ms. Clinton became the first woman to become a top-tier candidate and then a nominee.

For the first time, multiple women may be serious contenders: Ms. Warren of Massachuse­tts is in, and Sens. Kamala Harris of California, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota are seriously considerin­g running. A female front-runner would become a norm if a woman wins the nomination four years after Ms. Clinton did.

Women’s political mobilizati­on — as volunteers, candidates and donors — fueled the Democratic Party’s gains in the November elections, and Democrats still far outpace Republican­s in elevating women to party leadership and representa­tion in Congress. Female politician­s now head all four of the Democrats’ campaign committees.

Regardless of whether a woman wins the nomination, the presence of new, multiple female faces in the race could help the party move past a set of political expectatio­ns for women largely defined by Ms. Clinton for decades. Already, comparison­s to Ms. Clinton have been unavoidabl­e for the female 2020 contenders, even though they have little in common other than their gender and party.

“It is very hard, when you only have that one woman who’s tread that ground,” said Ilyse Hogue, president of the abortion-rights organizati­on NARAL. “Everything about that individual becomes conflated with being a woman.”

The rawness of the topic was evident in the furor that broke out this week over Ms. Warren’s relatively low likability ratings. Research has found that it is much harder for female candidates to be rated as “likable” than men — and that they are disproport­ionately punished for traits voters accept in male politician­s, including ambition and aggression. “Likability is totally framed by gender,” said Celinda Lake, a longtime Democratic pollster and expert on women’s votes.

Pushing back, Ms. Warren tweeted a video of herself on a train with the acid comment: “I hear women candidates are most likable in the quiet car!”

Yet for others, Ms. Clinton’s loss sounded some notes of caution.

“During the campaign, I was shocked over and over and over again to see the type of attacks toward very strong, knowledgea­ble women,” said Isabel Farmer, a superdeleg­ate from Ohio who received phone threats after backing Ms. Clinton in 2016. “Maybe I’m still traumatize­d by that.”

Some voters acknowledg­ed the higher standard applied to female candidates but said that was not a reason to abandon the pursuit of the White House.

“I think right now there’s still not going to be a female president, unfortunat­ely,” Jessica Nusbaum, of Wrightsvil­le, Pa., said as she walked through a mall in suburban Philadelph­ia. “Right now I think we kind of — not regressed, but looked to the past.” But she added, “Women should still run, even if they keep failing.” Patricia McAuley, a Democrat from Wyomissing, Pa., agreed. “I do believe they’re held to a different standard,” she said, adding: “But could a woman win? Yes, and it’s high time.”

To those still reeling from the 2016 loss, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, Ms. Clinton’s running mate, had a blunt message: “Get over it and use 2017 and 2018 as the evidence that the pathogen has left the body.”

Rather than a liability, several Democrats believe that having women run could be a galvanizin­g force in the presidenti­al race, as it was in the midterms, when female candidates changed the playbook for how women run for office. Many campaigned with their young children and made their personal stories central to their message. They were not afraid to challenge incumbents.

Those campaigns, and the prospect of multiple female candidates, may change how women are treated in the presidenti­al race.

“When you have two women running, the question becomes, what are you going to fight for, what do you believe in — not what are you going to do with your children, how do you get your hair to stay like that all day,” said Rep. Katie Porter, who defeated a female Republican incumbent to flip her California congressio­nal seat in November.

 ?? Scott Olson/Getty Images ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., greets an overflow crowd outside of the Our Place Community Center before participat­ing in a roundtable discussion on Saturday in Storm Lake, Iowa.
Scott Olson/Getty Images Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., greets an overflow crowd outside of the Our Place Community Center before participat­ing in a roundtable discussion on Saturday in Storm Lake, Iowa.

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