According to her opponent, Kay Hagan doesn’t know how to do math. A familiar throwback to thirty years ago when Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro didn’t know the difference between Iran and Lebanon.
For some, Wednesday night’s North Carolina Senate debate between Sen. Hagan and her Republican opponent, State House Speaker Thom Tillis, felt like déjà vu. It was 1984 all over again for the late Ferraro’s daughter, Donna Zaccaro, who said Tillis’ treatment of Hagan was “sadly very reminiscent of the sexist attacks used against my mother when she ran for Vice President 30 years ago.”
“Tillis would have never used the same language or bullying approach if he were running against a male candidate,” Zaccaro said.
Tillis, who referred to Hagan simply as “Kay” during the hour-long debate and came under fire by some for taking a condescending tone toward Hagan, questioned the Senator’s ability to comprehend budgets, math and policy.
“If only she would have read the budget she might understand it,” scolded Tillis. “Kay’s math just doesn’t add up…That’s reality and that’s math and that’s something that Kay needs to accept.”
Tillis’ assault echoed the messages of his campaign’s latest television ads, released just days before the debate.
“That’s simple math,” Tillis says in the ad. “But math is lost on Senator Hagan.”
Halfway through Wednesday night’s debate though, Hagan had enough.
“I’m actually insulted by his comments,” she said. “I was a Vice President of a bank. I wrote billion dollar state budgets in North Carolina. I understand math. Even when I was a teenager, I worked at my dad’s tire store and did layaway for people buying tires. I understand math.”
Three decades ago, Vice President George H.W. Bush took a similar tack against Ferraro in a nationally televised 1984 vice presidential debate.
“Let me help you with the difference, Ms. Ferraro, between the embassy in Iran and Lebanon,” Bush said to Ferraro in a moment which became famous for Ferraro’s bold response.









