Of all the days of the year, it’s fitting that MSNBC political analyst Elise Jordan was due to give birth on Election Day.
“I kind of thought like, ‘Oh, well, if I have to be in labor a long time, then I can watch election results,’” Jordan said.
But the year 2020 is not known for going according to plan. Instead, she gave birth two weeks early to her first child, daughter Mary Clyde. While Jordan is quick to acknowledge that her experience over the past 10 months has been easier than many, being pregnant and giving birth during the pandemic has its challenges — and, as Jordan sees it, its rewards.
“The pandemic has been good for nurturing patience, considering I’m a really impatient person normally,” Jordan said. “This time has been all about bracing yourself for what you can change and what you can’t change, which is quite a lot.”
She never could have expected how the year would go back in March, before the reality of the virus’s dangers gripped the country. Newly pregnant, Jordan asked her doctor if she and her husband should still go on a family ski trip in Colorado.
“People were talking about the pandemic, but it hadn’t really hit yet,” Jordan remembered. “And [the doctor] said, ‘Well, you can go to Colorado. It’ll be the last trip you’re going to take for a long, long time.’”
Sure enough, that happy stretch in the beginning of March marked the last time Jordan saw her Mississippi family, along with her last restaurant meal and her last trip to 30 Rock, the site from which she frequently appeared on-air on MSNBC and NBC. Like many, she’s now working from home, frequently doing TV appearances and writing a history of women during World War II.
“It was scary, just all the unknowns,” Jordan remembered about living in New York City in the spring, when coronavirus cases spiked. “They didn’t really know the effects of Covid-19 on a developing baby.” She and her husband and their dog left their Tribeca apartment to hunker down in their Sag Harbor home three hours east. By the time she gave birth in mid-October, she was grateful for a relative lull in case rates. But that outlook was tested when she went to the hospital where Mary Clyde would be born a day before a C-section, which had been scheduled after Jordan found out she had placenta previa.
“The day before I went in for surgery, we had to go to the Covid-19 tent at Mount Sinai and get tested. And so, you’re in this long line in the rain with people, some people who are getting tested like you for surgery, some people who are really, really sick and you can just see how sick they are,” Jordan said. “I was thinking, ‘I’ve been so careful this entire pandemic and super isolated and please, I don’t want to get coronavirus today before I give birth.’”
Her husband was a calming presence at an anxiety-inducing time, pointing out that the medical professionals at the hospital had had months to figure out the best way to test incoming patients.
It wasn’t the only time her husband proved to be “the best patient advocate” in the hospital setting. They were both aware that placenta previa put Jordan at risk for complications during labor. An hour and a half into the C-section, she said aloud that she could feel the doctors operating on her.









