Sen. Hillary Clinton did not win enough delegates to capture the Democratic
presidential nomination but she is not conceding to Barack Obama. It is a
strategy of having it both ways that is familiar to Clinton watchers. Why
should she surrender when, as she has said, "anything can happen"? The
nomination is not official until the delegates convene at the Democratic
National Convention in Denver.
Assuming, though, that this is truly the end of her 2008 campaign, the
question now becomes: what about the next female candidate? Will it be
easier for her because Sen. Clinton broke new ground? Will that next woman
run as a liberal Democrat like Clinton, or a conservative Republican in the
mold of Margaret Thatcher? Will she get the same attention as Clinton, or
will she be like the second man to walk on the moon?
The media mostly ignored - and so did the public - a detailed analysis of
what Clinton promised (everything), what it would cost (plenty), how it
would be paid for (higher taxes) and the effect of a precipitous withdrawal
from Iraq when substantial progress is now being made (disaster). Gender and
the parallel issue of Obama's race trumped substance. Those issues masked a
retread liberal Democratic agenda, gift wrapped in new packaging and sold as
"change you can believe in."
A major problem for those wishing more conservative women would run for
national office is the smaller pool from which to draw candidates. Large
numbers of conservative women adhere to the "family values" they preach.
Many prefer the company of family members to that of politicians. It isn't
that they don't have drive, vision, or care less about their country than
liberal women; it is that their fulfillment comes at a different level and
they are paid in a different currency.
For liberals, government is the ultimate solution to all problems. For many
conservative women, solutions begin with individual decision-making and
family.
Is there an experienced, conservative, "traditional values" woman out there
who would be willing to put herself through the kind of campaign Hillary
Clinton has fought with every eye examining her hair, makeup and piece of
clothing (and accessories), rather than the substance of her views? If
Hillary Clinton has made superficiality less likely in judging women in
future national campaigns she will have made a great contribution. But I
doubt it. Media superficiality is bottomless.
What would a female conservative presidential candidate look like? First,
she wouldn't wear pantsuits - except when climbing into helicopters. She
would wear St. John (note to male readers: look it up; women are impressed I
know this). Her husband would be mostly in the background, like Denis
Thatcher. Unlike Bill Clinton, who can never leave the stage, this
conservative woman's husband would be secure enough in his own skin to allow
his wife to promote her beliefs unencumbered by him.
A conservative female candidate would tell stories of empowerment and
overcoming personal challenges that begin not in Washington, but in the
home. She might recall Barbara Bush's commencement speech at Wellesley
College in 1990 in which she said, "Your success as a family Š our success
as a society depends not on what happens in the White House, but on what
happens inside your house." Home, not Congress or the White House, is where
ultimate power lies. Getting and staying married, being responsible to your
children and spouse, these are the American values that built and sustained
our nation. No politician can do for an individual and a family what that
individual and family won't do for themselves.
A female conservative candidate would not reflect the narcissism that
characterizes the male quest for power. She would be tough, like Thatcher,
but she would be experienced in disarming egotistical males who would end up
(grudgingly) praising her for the experience. Like your mother or
grandmother, she would tell us to "stop whining, suck it up and make
something out of yourself. Don't wait for opportunity to knock at your door;
go out and break down opportunity's door."
Hillary Clinton may not have broken the "glass ceiling" for a female
president, but she's put a crack in it. Now if we can get beyond gender to
ideas that work, perhaps a conservative will break through that ceiling and
become our first female commander in chief. |