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April 25th, 2024

Insight

Team Hillary's absurd hysteria over Bernie's 'Excuse me' line

Rich Lowry

By Rich Lowry

Published March 11, 2016

It was the “Excuse me” that echoed around Democratic politics.

In their intense Flint, Mich., debate, Bernie Sanders pointedly said to Hillary Clinton in the heat of one exchange, “Excuse me, I’m talking.”

Sanders has an $18 trillion unicorns-dancing-on-rainbows spending program and a paranoiac’s view of Wall Street, but nothing is quite as disqualifying for the feminist left as his alleged “condescension” in this moment and a couple of others.

The debate flap demonstrates how feminism is caught between its dual insistence that women are indistinguishable from men and at the same time due special consideration because they’re uniquely vulnerable to slights, intended or unintended.

No one should have to worry about Hillary Clinton on this score. She isn’t a college sophomore making her first nervous presentation before a public-speaking class. She has been in public life since 1978, and on the national stage since 1991. She was a highly engaged first lady, a senator from New York, secretary of state and, twice, a presidential candidate.

She debated Barack Obama 26 times in 2008. She has weathered more public controversies than any politician in America — with the exception only of Donald Trump — and endured countless congressional hearings. Yet her allies think she can’t bear a couple of sharp words from Bernie Sanders?

During the exchange, Hillary was misleadingly accusing Sanders of opposing the auto bailout. She used Jesuitical wording to make it sound as though his vote against the TARP Wall Street bailout meant he didn’t want to extend federal aid to Detroit. It was when Sanders replied to this attack that Clinton tried to break in, and Sanders issued forth with his “Excuse me.”

Sanders isn’t exactly a threatening figure. The 74-year-old socialist can fairly be accused of an excess of charming irascibility, but he’s about as malicious as a Peter, Paul and Mary song. His problem is that he doesn’t do identity politics well, or at least not exquisitely enough to meet the standards of the contemporary left. So he’s stepped into a couple of (ridiculous) charges of sexism, and he’s constantly being accused of insufficient racial awareness.

At the Flint debate, Sanders said whites don’t know what it’s like to live in the ghetto, which he surely thought was innocuous enough, but opened him up to charges of tone-deafness — he had used the dated word “ghetto” and supposedly implied that only blacks are poor. Tsk-tsk. It’s not easy being an old-fashioned, class-obsessed left-winger in today’s Democratic Party.

A general election won’t have the same hot-house left-wing atmosphere of the Democratic primary, but Hillary’s potential GOP rivals should take note. Taking on Clinton will require some finesse because most people feel, simply as a matter of good manners, that women should be afforded more courtesy. We may have jettisoned almost every standard of personal conduct, but this ember of gentlemanly expectation still lives on.

Bludgeoning Hillary into submission, the Trump method of debate, won’t work. Ted Cruz, whose lawyerly arguments easily slip into genuine condescension, would have to calibrate accordingly. If a socialist grandfather can be made out to be Archie Bunker, imagine what awaits a Republican.

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