When former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell told The Washington Post that Trump’s past comments about women “would come back to haunt him. There are probably more ugly women in America than attractive women,” it instantly caught fire. Though Rendell promptly apologized, the implication, of course, was that Hillary Clinton, whom Rendell supports, was going to win on the strength of the mirror-shattering women of America.
The main problem is not that Rendell was calling potential Clinton voters ugly — although that did, in fact, sound bad. The larger issue is that, by saying women would be offended because Trump wouldn’t classify them as a “10,” Rendell had implicitly accepted the Trump worldview. That would be a system in which what men think of women’s looks defines them, including in women’s own minds, and in which, it follows, beauty is a women’s ultimate attainment. When was the last time you heard a public figure casually classify men on the basis of their attractiveness?
It’s why you hear Trump wax on so cringingly about his daughter Ivanka’s attractiveness: By all evidence, it’s the highest possible compliment he can imagine giving a woman.
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In the scheme of things, Rendell’s spouting off was no particular outrage and will not likely change votes. But what was striking was how out of touch it sounded in a party positioning itself as a champion of “breaking barriers,” as Clinton has often put it. For a Democratic Party seeking to elect the first female president — which won its last presidential election on the strength of unmarried women, especially women of color, and which desperately hopes to siphon off white married women who often vote Republican — this was reading from an old playbook. Gone, mostly, is Democrats’ past anxiety at being the so-called “mommy party.”









