Comedian and TV host Samantha Bee described one flourish as Bernie Sanders trying to “flag down a waitress.” A Bustle writer said the Vermont senator, always expressive with his hands, “only reserves the index finger wave for moments when you’re imagining him screaming, ‘I don’t think so, missy!’ internally.” The Onion joked that one jab would send the senator tumbling off the debate stage. Still others, watching Thursday’s Democratic debate, saw the Vermont senator and presidential candidate gesticulate, as he does, and wondered if a female candidate would get away with such physical forcefulness.
Well turn the glove inside out: Could Clinton (or any woman!) get a pass on that sort of behavior? #DemDebate https://t.co/qykfo5jEqg
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) February 12, 2016
Can you imagine if Hillary Clinton was the one wagging her finger #demdebate #justsaying
— Rachel Sklar (@rachelsklar) February 12, 2016
To his supporters, Sanders’ body language, which many (including this reporter) associate with his Brooklyn Jewish-American upbringing, may make him even more endearing. It’s in keeping with his unvarnished persona and baggy suits. “There is a rumpled authenticity to Bernie Sanders,” David Axelrod recently observed. But women in public life rarely have the luxury of being unkempt on the stump. And social scientists have found that the exact same affect by a woman simply doesn’t play the same way.
That includes the candidates’ voices — and how they use them. “Thanks to his maleness, Sanders’ yelling gets interpreted by his audiences and especially his supporters as the righteous anger of a tough leader, while, due to her femaleness, Clinton’s would be heard by many people as the screeching of a ‘hysterical’ or ‘nagging’ woman,” Nicholas Subtirelu, a linguistics professor at Georgia State University, told Time magazine.
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In one experiment conducted in Norway — a country with a better track record of electing women than the United States — researchers had a male actor and a female actor deliver exactly the same speech. “Our main finding is that the male ‘politician’ was believed to be more knowledgeable, trustworthy and convincing than the female ‘politician’ even though they presented the same speech verbatim,” the researchers wrote.









