Column: Elizabeth Warren blew up the rules about female rage and came away without a scratch
Enough of this crap.
This has to be what Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said to herself moments before taking the stage for the Democratic debate in Las Vegas. Whether driven by a âgo big or go homeâ instinct for survival after poor showings in early primaries, pushed to the limit by her exclusion from a recent survey of how the candidates would fare against President Trump or simply fueled by the inevitable frustration of the double standards and extra-special likability factors faced by anyone campaigning while female, Warren went full throttle.
For the record:
3:18 p.m. Feb. 20, 2020An earlier version of this story quoted Elizabeth Warren as saying âIâm talking about Mike Bloomberg.â The correct quote is âIâm talking about Mayor Bloomberg.â
She raged, she stormed, she name-checked, she dismissed, she claimed the most time, she did all the things female candidates are not supposed to do. And far from self-destructing, she went on to enjoy a record-breaking day of campaign donations and a Twitter trend of #PresidentElizabethWarren.
The revolution really was televised.
Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg took flak from all sides in Wednesdayâs contentious debate. The fireworks were a sight to behold. But politically inspiring? Thatâs another matter.
Warren has never been afraid of strongly worded declarative sentences, either in person or on Twitter, but on Wednesday night she took it to a double-standard-shredding new level. From the moment she opened her mouth to say, âIâd like to talk about who weâre running against: a billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians. And no, Iâm not talking about Donald Trump. Iâm talking about Mayor Bloomberg,â Warren made clear that if two centuries of American democracy still hadnât provided a level playing field for women, well, sheâd level the field herself.
She wasnât just determined or confident or pointed or any of those things female candidates often choose to be for fear that unsmiling anger, so beloved by Bernie Sanders supporters, will be tagged in them as shrill and unattractive. She was outraged. Controlled, complete-sentence, full-paragraph outraged. Over Bloombergâs history of sexist remarks and NDAs, the tactics of the Bernie Sanders campaign, the scantiness of Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobucharâs healthcare plans. She unloaded her wrath on science-haters, immigrant-bashers and pretty much anyone who thought that, after years of being touted as the person who, unlike the âproblematicâ Hillary Clinton, could become the first female president, she was just going to quietly surrender to Bernie, or Joe, or Mayor Pete.
Elizabeth Warren was unleashed.
And it did not occur in a vacuum.
The perception that a man adopting a âtake no prisonersâ attitude is strong, passionate and aggressive while a woman doing the same is controlling, mean and shrill is increasingly being seen for what it is â skewed and, consciously or not, sexist.
Outrage over Clinton being seen as less âlikableâ than Trump, the #MeToo movement and a slow but steady increase of women in leadership positions has cleared space for women to access the same range of emotional traits as men. Controlled women are no longer âicyâ; outrage is no longer âhysteria.â
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez proved that a woman can dance and ask the tough questions. Millions of women showed that it is possible to march and wear pink âpussy hats.â When ousted from her position as the first female president of the Recording Academy, Deborah Dugan responded with scorched-earth tactics of her own. It is not a coincidence that Warrenâs evisceration of Bloombergâs history of sexually inappropriate remarks and NDAs happened even as Harvey Weinstein and his walker await a verdict in criminal court.
The fiery candidate showdown among Democratic presidential candidates drew nearly 20 million viewers on NBC and MSNBC, a record high.
Narratively speaking, Warrenâs sustained big swing on Wednesday night was a climactic, pivot-point performance, worthy of âThe West Wingâsâ Josiah Bartlet: all power and no missteps. Warren wasnât forced to stutter out a justification for being a socialist with three houses as Sanders was. She didnât regrettably display her inner weasel by turning on the low-hanging fruit of Klobucharâs campaign as Buttigieg did. Her closing remarks werenât interrupted by protesters accusing her of deporting millions as Bidenâs were.
If life were a movie, it would have marked the moment she clinched the nomination.
Life, however, is not a movie, and though Warrenâs campaign enjoyed record-breaking donations after the debate, she remains far from the front-runner.
But for the first time â and with any luck, not the last â a female presidential candidate didnât just play with fire, she threw it, at everyone in her path, and stepped off the stage without a blister.
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