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Novara

(5,841 posts)
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 06:48 PM Apr 2015

Clinton’s First Campaign Speech Is All About Feminism

Clinton’s First Campaign Speech Is All About Feminism

The first speech of a presidential campaign is loaded with meaning, an opportunity to set the campaign's entire tone and outline its major themes. Barack Obama kicked off his 2008 campaign in Springfield, Illinois, to invoke the legacy of Abraham Lincoln and a larger theme of calling on a "divided house to stand together." In contrast, Ronald Reagan kicked off his 1980 campaign at the Neshoba County Fair in Mississippi, near the site where three civil rights workers had been murdered 16 years before, to make a speech about "states' rights" and secure the Republican stronghold over the Southern white vote that persists to this day.

Hillary Clinton announced her campaign online, but her first meatspace speech was held Thursday at the Women in the World Summit in New York City, an annual feminist shindig that's all about improving women's fortunes around the world. The choice of the location in itself sends a strong signal, and if there was any doubt that Clinton intends to run a woman-centric campaign, her speech erased it. "When women are held back, our country is held back. When women get ahead, everyone gets ahead," she declared.
The idea that uplifting women uplifts the nation has become standard fare in Democratic speech-making. For instance, in Obama's 2014 speech on equal pay, he said, "And part of that is fighting for fair pay for women—because when women succeed, America succeeds." When women make less money, he said, that's "less money for gas, less money for groceries, less money for child care, less money for college tuition, less money is going into retirement savings."

Clinton took this rhetoric to a bolder level. For one thing, she actually used the word feminist. "It is hard to believe that in 2015 so many women still pay a price for being mothers. It is also hard to believe that so many women are also paid less than many for the same work, with even wider gaps for women of color," she said. "And if you don’t believe what I say, look to the World Economic Forum, hardly a hotbed of feminist thought. Their rankings show that the United States is 65th out of 142 nations and other territories on equal pay."

She tied together other explicitly feminist issues, such as reproductive rights and the fight against sexual assault to the family-friendly equal-pay agenda. "There are those who offer themselves as leaders who see nothing wrong with denying women equal pay," she argued in a shot against Republicans. "There are those who offer themselves as leaders who would defund the country’s leading provider of family planning and want to let health insurance companies once again charge women just because of our gender." Clinton invoked the recent fight over the appointment of Loretta Lynch as attorney general: Republicans weren't explicitly sexist to Lynch, but her appointment was held up over an ugly fight over Republicans trying to attach anti-abortion provisions to every bill they possibly can.

Read more: http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2015/04/24/hillary_clinton_s_first_campaign_speech_it_s_all_about_feminism.html

It is a smart move. Perk women's interest first, then when the misogynistic backlash hits, what she says will be more powerful and it will get more women energized. I like it.
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Novara

(5,841 posts)
5. They're going to attack her as a "feminazi" anyway, she might as well....
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 07:45 PM
Apr 2015

....start exploiting that. Does anyone think she doesn't know this? But when the attacks against women come, more women will get angry. Hopefully they'll vote. And not just for president. I hope she points out the red state rednecks who are trying to take women backwards. I hope she harps on red state governors and red state congresspersons and red state legislatures.

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
2. Hillary has advocated for women for a long time. Every step we move forward
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 06:55 PM
Apr 2015

Is still with resistance. We have some who thinks we should be in "our place" and not in the working world. Thank you Hillary for speaking up. Men should not be telling us what to do with our bodies.

4now

(1,596 posts)
3. Link to video
Fri Apr 24, 2015, 07:17 PM
Apr 2015

Here is a post by joshcryer with a link to the video.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/1017261119

It didn't really seem like a customary campaign speech and I liked it a lot.

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