WASHINGTON — Would the war against preying on women be blazing so fiercely had Hillary Clinton been elected?
When
I interviewed women in Hollywood about the ugly Harvey Weinstein
revelations in The Times and The New Yorker, they told me that feelings
of frustration and disgust at having an accused predator in the White
House instead of the first woman president had helped give the story
velocity.
When I talked to Susan Fowler, after her blog post
about sexual harassment at Uber that toppled its C.E.O., Travis
Kalanick, she said that before Donald Trump’s election, women in Silicon
Valley were speaking up but no one was listening.
“I
think it was different this year because Trump won and people felt
powerless,” she said. “I know I did. I felt super powerless. Because I
felt, with Obama in the White House, I could just take for granted that
good people were in charge.”
It
is also interesting to speculate: If Hillary were in the Oval, would
some women have failed to summon the courage to tell their Weinstein
horror stories because the producer was also a power behind the Clinton
throne? As Janice Min, the former editor of The Hollywood Reporter, told
me, when Barack Obama stepped off a stage and into Weinstein’s arms for
a big hug after giving a $400,000 speech as an ex-president in the
spring, it sent a signal that the ogre was in a protected magic circle.
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And,
finally, would Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and other liberals still be
saying in the past few days that Bill Clinton should have resigned the
presidency over his own sexual misdeeds if he now occupied the first
lady’s quarters and reigned over a potent Clinton political machine?
Or
would feminists and liberals make the same Faustian bargain they made
in 1998: protect Bill on his retrogressive behavior toward women because
the Clintons have progressive policies toward women? So what if a few
women are collateral damage, they might ask — again. Wouldn’t you rather
have Bill and Bill’s enabler, Hillary, than Donald?
You
may wonder why in the year 2017, after so many graphic and scalding
national seminars on sexual predation over the last 26 years, we are
still trying to come to terms with it.
Perhaps
because in those earlier traumatic sagas, both the left and the right
rushed in to twist them for their own ideological ends. The stench of
hypocrisy overpowered the perfume of justice.
First,
with Clarence Thomas, a feminist lynch mob tried to kill off a
conservative Supreme Court nominee over sex when the real reason they
wanted to get rid of him was politics. Then, with Bill Clinton, a
conservative lynch mob tried to kill off a Democratic president over sex
when the real reason they wanted to get rid of him was politics.
Institutional
feminism died when Gloria Steinem, Madeleine Albright and other top
feminists vouched for President Clinton as he brazenly lied about never
having had a sexual relationship with “that woman” — Monica Lewinsky.
The Clintons and feminists were outraged when Thomas’s supporters
painted Anita Hill as “a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty.” Yet
that was precisely the Clintonian tack when women spoke up about Bill’s
misbehaving.
Time
and again, Hillary was a party to demonizing women as liars, bimbos,
trailer trash or troubled souls when it seemed clear they were truthful
about her philandering husband. She often justified this by thinking of
the women as instruments of the right-wing conspiracy.
As I reported in ’98,
even some veteran Clinton henchmen felt a little nauseated about the
debate inside the White House on a slander strategy for Lewinsky: Should
they paint her as a friendly fantasist or a malicious stalker?
Following
the Clintons’ lead, Trump dismissed the more than dozen women who stood
up to accuse him of sexual transgressions as politically motivated
liars.
The
president has also politicized the accusations against Republican
Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore and Democratic Senator Al Franken. In
the first case, despite heinous reports painting Moore as haunting a
mall to cruise for teenage girls, Trump has refused to disavow the
Stephen Bannon-backed candidate, at one point claiming he didn’t know
enough about Moore to comment because he does “not watch much
television.” (!!)
In the case of Franken, the president has been happily tweeting his opprobrium and suggesting Franken might have done worse:
“The Al Frankenstien picture is really bad, speaks a thousand words.
Where do his hands go in pictures 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 while she sleeps?”
Ivanka
Trump said that she has “no reason to doubt the victims’ accounts” in
the Moore case, but she doesn’t feel the same about her dad’s accusers.
And Bannon dismissed the report of Moore’s despicable behavior by saying
that it was, just like Trump’s “Access Hollywood” remarks, first
published in The Washington Post — which he calls “part of the apparatus
of the Democratic Party.”
Are
the liberals who now say Bill should have resigned because they want to
clear the decks to better go after President Trump, thinking that sex
may be a more effective weapon than Russia to bring him down? It’s easy
to turn on the Clintons these days and treat them as collateral damage,
the way the Clintons treated all those women who got tangled up with
Bill.
Once
more, politics is clouding the issue of sexual harassment. But
hopefully this public trial, which is bringing to the dock men on both
sides of the aisle, is too momentous to be diminished by politics.
As
Senator Franken’s accuser, Leeann Tweeden, a Los Angeles radio
newscaster, told CNN’s Jake Tapper: “When you’re sexually assaulted, it
doesn’t matter if you’re a Republican or a Democrat. … The affiliation
doesn’t matter, right?”
“That’s not,” she correctly concluded, “the point here.”
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