The exchanges over Mike Bloomberg’s record on women and discrimination at the recent Democratic debate in Las Vegas were entertaining, but also revealed a political culture stuck in a rut
Before I covered national politics, I covered state politics in Virginia. In the past three presidential cycles the state has gone Democratic but in those days, the 1990s, it had voted Republican at the presidential level since 1964. Democrats could win statewide office but only if they presented themselves as practical-minded moderates who didn’t offend Old Dominion sensibilities.
I once asked her what explained the gulf—why was she so restrained and opaque and downright uncomfortable in public? She looked at me incredulously and asked me to put down my notebook. A quarter-century later I will paraphrase but not quoteThe answer was no, I honestly did not buy it. The year before, 1992, was in national politics “the year of the women,” when five female candidates were elected to the Senate—a record at the time. And Terry herself had already knocked down the gender barrier.
After the most recent debate, when Klobuchar was grilled over not knowing the name of the Mexican president, the split in post-debate chatter was a Rorschach test: Some thought former Mayor Pete Buttigieg had skillfully exploited her lapse, others thought he was smug and patronizing. Klobuchar was in the latter camp: “Are you trying to say that I’m dumb? Or are you mocking me here, Pete?”
That’s why Bloomberg’s debate performance offered a useful window on the question. His words, tone and body language made it pretty easy to guess his thought bubble:
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