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Reproductive Justice and Gender

The Sisterhood Split

By Jessica Valenti, The Nation. Posted March 10, 2008.


Instead of calls for togetherness, feminists should use this election as a chance to learn from each other and to create the movement we want.
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At a Washington reception last month for a well-known national women's organization, the chair of the board asked Maureen McFadden, a communications executive with the organization, which candidate she'd voted for in the recent primary. McFadden, hoping to avoid an awkward moment, answered that she'd voted by absentee ballot. The board chair pressed ahead, "Did you vote for a boy or a girl?"

"I paused for a long time," says McFadden. "Then I told her I voted for a boy -- I wasn't going to lie." McFadden, who has worked on women's issues for twenty years, says the room went silent and the board chair chastised her. "It was clear that I had betrayed feminism by voting for Obama. It became obvious -- if you didn't vote for Hillary, you were less than a feminist and only marginally a woman."

It's no secret that Clinton's candidacy has caused waves in feminist circles. Media outlets from the Wall Street Journal to the Washington Post have reported on the rift between feminists voting for Clinton and those supporting Obama. Blogs have weighed in, and feminist listservs are aflame. As a feminist blogger and writer, I've been watching the tension unfold--but with no great surprise. This election "rift," far from being a new wrinkle in a feminist utopia, is a fairly predictable response from a movement already disunited. The Clinton-Obama divide has shone a spotlight on feminism's dirty little not-so secret: the movement's longstanding power imbalance, in which a few organizations and leaders decide what counts as an acceptable platform. Indeed, feminist support for Clinton--coming from the usual suspects like the National Organization for Women (NOW), EMILY's List, Gloria Steinem and former Ms. magazine editor Robin Morgan--has been organized, strong and far-reaching. What's been less than savvy, however, is the reaction some feminist Clinton supporters have expressed toward their Obama-endorsing cohorts. I've seen Obama supporters called everything from naïve to traitors to the cause, and the majority of this ire has come from mainstream professional feminists.

For example, in a widely disseminated article that inspired responses ranging from effusive to horrified, Morgan diagnosed young women who support Obama as "eager to win male approval by showing they're not feminists (at least not the kind who actually threaten the status quo), who can't identify with a woman candidate because she is unafraid of eeueweeeu yucky power..." Gloria Feldt, former president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, penned a piece for The Huffington Post in which she warned women they would be missing out on a historic moment if they didn't vote for Clinton. "Will women give this Moment away freely once again?" she pondered.

The intensity of feminist infighting has even prompted a call for reconciliation. "Morning in America: A letter from feminists on the election" in last week's Nation, written by feminist heavyweights, called on women to "refocus on the bigger picture." But the letter--written after a breakfast of blueberry muffins served on "the good china" at Steinem's house, with nary a woman under 40 in sight--represents the exact problem it purports to seek an end to: the narrowing of feminist viewpoints. Moreover, feminists make a mistake in prematurely calling for unity. Instead of glossing over the problem with the rhetoric of sisterhood or having an elite group declare the dispute settled, let's own the conflict and use it to make real progress.


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See more stories tagged with: elections, gender, race, feminism, barack obama, hillary clinton, election 2008

Jessica Valenti is the executive editor of Feministing.

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From Anti-Porn to Anti-Obama
Posted by: goldmarx on Mar 10, 2008 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Steinem and Morgan were founders of the anti-porn movement, the one that first came up with the mindset that a woman was a traitor to the cause if she didn't march on Times Square and protest girlie mags as hate propaganda.

They struck a responsive chord, and are now at it again, except that Obama is the new Larry Flynt.

And that picture accompanying the article - is that Obama checking out Hillary's ass????

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» Feminism in a Nut Shell Posted by: Verjenie
A simple answer to the dilemma:
Posted by: oregoncharles on Mar 10, 2008 11:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cynthia McKinney.

When it comes to identity politics, she trumps both Hillary and Barack. You can have your cake and eat it too.

Much more to the point, she is a genuine progressive leader, the first to introduce articles of impeachment against the Bush administration. She also has a perfect environmental voting record, to say nothing of the rest of our issues. Her background in the civil rights movement reaches back into childhood, which is one reason she's so outspoken.

Why do you think the Democratic Party drove her out of office? That much truth was toxic to them. She might have interfered with their payoffs from the corporate elite!

Now she's a Green Party candidate for President. (She hasn't been nominated yet, any more than H. or B., but I'm confident she will be. We won't pass up an opportunity like this.)

Valenti's article is intended to play down the dilemma between voting for a woman or an African-American, but in fact it is real, especially given their all-but-identical voting records. So if you want to solve it and have the chance to support a genuine progressive, join the Green Party and help get Cynthia on every ballot in the country.

Her website is runcynthiarun.org; the party's is gpus.org.

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Finally Some Introspection Regarding Feminism
Posted by: desidid on Mar 10, 2008 3:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a segment on Democracy Now! with Steinem, Melissa Harris-Lacewell, an associate professor of politics and African-American studies at Princeton, took this single-issue mind-set to task: "Part of what, again, has been sort of an anxiety for African-American women feminists like myself is that we're often asked to join up with white women's feminism, but only on their own terms, as long as we sort of remain silent about the ways in which our gender, our class, our sexual identity doesn't intersect, as long as we can be quiet about those things and join onto a single agenda."

And she forgot to mention as long as we are followers and not leaders. Heaven forbid we (women of color) set the agenda.

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Shelia Jackson Lee
Posted by: Verjenie on Mar 10, 2008 6:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like Shelia Jackson Lee, congresswoman of Texas:

Darfur
On 28 April 2006, Jackson-Lee, along with four other members of Congress and six other activists, was arrested for disorderly conduct in front of the Sudanese embassy in Washington. They were protesting the role of Sudan's government in ethnic cleansing in Darfur.
Jackson-Lee volunteered herself as an advocate for the father of Elián González in the international custody controversy. She also attracted controversy in 2003 by meeting with Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and offering to sponsor a visit for the controversial leader to come to the United States.
Jackson-Lee is one of the cosponsors of the 2007 Assault Weapons Ban and Law Enforcement Protection Act.
Jackson Lee has urged better relations between the U.S. and Venezuela, which she describes as a friendly nation.

She supports Hillary Clinton.
I voted for Barak Obama. Actually among my twenty-something female friends it was the Thing.
However, I will openly fight fo Hillary if she is being slurred or marginalized,
particularly by using attacks against her that
trivialize her REAL RECORD and aim to PRETEND that she's
not human, a witch??????? (used derogatorily thus also slurring witches)........

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Femnists practicing reverse discrimination won't win my vote
Posted by: foreverhope on Mar 10, 2008 8:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am sorry fellow femnists, but for me, all Hillary Clinton is proving, is that a woman can be just as ruthless, manipulative and ambitious as any man or any politician that ever lived.

But we are never really JUST talking about Hillary are we? Isn't that disingenuous? I NEVER think of Hillary without thinking of Bill. They were co-presidents in the 90's no doubt about that, they will be co-presidents again if she wins. That alone makes me very uncomfortable. A former president back in the White House, sorry, I don't like it. I was beyond unhappy with many things that happened during the Clinton Years. Their combined melodrama was enough for a lifetime, everything from Whitewater to Paula Jones to more than dubious presidential pardons.

I DON'T WANT TO GO BACK TO THE CLINTON YEARS, NOT FOR HILLARY, NOT FOR FEMNISM, NOT FOR ANYTHING.

I cut my teeth on the femnist movement, but first and foremost I am an AMERICAN. I will vote for the candidate I believe with all my heart is best, the one that will impliment the change this country needs urgently and desperately, being a man or a woman has NOTHING to do with it. I deeply resent being put in the position of traitor. I will not practice reverse discrimination, not for Hillary, not for anyone.

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I reMEMber that Democracy Now! interview
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 13, 2008 10:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a segment on Democracy Now! with Steinem, Melissa Harris-Lacewell, an associate professor of politics and African-American studies at Princeton, took this single-issue mind-set to task: "Part of what, again, has been sort of an anxiety for African-American women feminists like myself is that we're often asked to join up with white women's feminism, but only on their own terms, as long as we sort of remain silent about the ways in which our gender, our class, our sexual identity doesn't intersect, as long as we can be quiet about those things and join onto a single agenda."

When Harris-Lacewell said that, it was like a bomb went off in the firehouse studio, baby! I was on my feet cheering and jumping up and down. Steinem's response was tepid, tentative and she ducked it, later getting angry with Harris-Lacewell when she pressed Steinem harder on the issue, I think it was a classist thing at that point and Steinem, privileged, entitled, had no idea how to respond so she just counterattacked. It was shameful.

Until the owning class women get their hubris in check, and wake up to cross-class dialogue realities and get a clue on the issue-trap rubric, I won't expect much change from the sistas. I wish you the best and a bunch of us guys give you our support. I'm so grateful for Jessica Valenti and Melissa Harris-Lacewell.

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