During a campaign stop in Rochester, Pennsylvania, over the weekend, Vice President Kamala Harris lobbed a volley in her war on Donald Trump’s hypermasculine ways, criticizing the “perversion” and “coward”-like behavior undergirding the bravado.
It was a nice reversal of the usual gendered rhetoric.
Trump’s attacks on Harris have dripped with misogyny and general creepiness since she emerged as the Democratic nominee. He’s repeatedly insulted her intelligence; lately, he’s resorted to commenting about her physical appearance as well. Meanwhile, the campaign and allies in conservative media have tried to broaden his appeal with male voters while deploying some rather juvenile tactics.
Trump’s increasingly hypermasculine persona arguably gives Democrats an opening.
But Trump’s increasingly hypermasculine persona — a toxic mixture of Al Bundy from “Married … With Children” and Biff Tannen from “Back to the Future” — arguably gives Democrats an opening.
Even when President Joe Biden was still running, Democrats made concerted efforts to attack Trump’s performative masculinity and bullying behavior to discourage men from following in his path. And the Harris-Walz ticket has afforded Democrats more opportunity to attack toxic MAGA masculinity, with an uncowed woman leading the ticket and her running mate offering a comparatively kinder, more compassionate depiction of masculinity than is being offered by Trump and his followers.
And Harris launched a pointed attack of her own on Sunday, contrasting how her campaign perceives strength with how … others … do.








