Ladies, first
On October 24, 2007, five wives of five
presidential candidates participated in a discussion at the
California Governor and First Lady’s Conference on Women. In the
opening address, hostess and California first lady Maria Shriver
emphasized the event’s importance.
“What you are witnessing up here is
history,” she told the audience. “I want you to understand the
magnitude of what you’re seeing.” The screen providing the
backdrop for the five women’s discussion featured the glowing
words, “Architects of Change.” Both Shriver’s introduction
and the event’s title told the audience at the outset that what
these women have to say matters a great deal. The value of their
contribution to public discourse was left to them to demonstrate.
The discussion had little to do with the
roles these women might play in the public sphere. The women told us
about the joys and hardships of campaign trail life, the extent to
which they advise (not at all) and support (unwaveringly) their
husbands, their love for every American, and their thoughts on the
pressures faced by all women, even, as Michelle Obama, wife of
Illinois Senator Barack Obama said, “regular folks.”
My surprise in watching the event was not
simply due to the frivolity of these topics but also that the
audience was expected to understand that in a conversation with the
spouses of five prominent candidates, these topics are perceived to
be of greater interest than the presidential race itself.
Perhaps we should not expect the women to
discuss the political issues that dominate their husbands’
presidential debates, but it is odd that the discussion elicited so
little critical thinking about the significance of candidates’
spouses in the race itself. After all, an event dedicated to
potential first ladies which is apparently significant enough to make
the national news would seem to have included more substantial
issues.
But the women were reluctant to dwell on
the idea that they have public relevance. When Jeri Thompson, wife
of former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson, confessed that her
“biggest fear” is “embarrassing Fred,” Elizabeth Edwards,
wife of former North Carolina Senator John Edwards, reassured her
that “Nobody is paying that much attention to us.” Most of the
women downplayed their influence in public affairs and denied having
anything to do with the advisement of their husbands on matters of
strategy. Curiously, they said this even when this is not apparently
the case. For example, Mrs. Edwards blogs for her husband and makes
frequent appearances on television. Yet, one would not know this fact
from this conference, which is perhaps telling about the persona they
wish to portray as opposed to the kinds of actions they participate
in on a less public level. More ostensive humility was echoed: Said
Thompson, a former employee of the Republican Senate Conference and
Republican National Committee, “I’m not even qualified.”
From this conference, apparently the only
reason to listen to these women is to hear about their
behind-the-scenes campaign experiences. Thompson had a baby-changing
table installed into her husband’s tour bus; Cyndi McCain, wife of
Arizona Senator John McCain, described “the wonder and beauty” of
what campaigning has done for her marriage.
Only towards the end of an hour-long
display of likeability did the women discuss the effect their
activity in public life might have on the election. “It doesn’t
matter how much anyone likes us,” said Edwards. When McCain
contested, “They do look at you very carefully, and your families,”
Edwards added, “That’s ’cause it tells them something about him
— the extent to which he is the good father, coaches soccer, plays
with [the children.]” Though Edwards admitted that the question of
her relevance is “something I struggle with,” she was referring
to a private issue, her struggle to justify “spending time away
from my children” to campaign with her husband. Only Obama
indicated a specific good that could come of the public attention
devoted to the candidates’ spouses in the event’s most serious
moment. “We can get Congress to really think critically about
campaign funding,” she told her. “That’s on us.” But Obama
does not explicate on how their position can necessarily give them
the agency to do such.
Though people may not pay that much
attention to them, these women nonetheless do have public influence.
The women acknowledged this attention, but, Obama’s point aside,
they were hesitant to regard themselves as anything other than the
messengers of their husband’s family man qualities. Beyond this,
the five women apparently had little interest in commenting on why an
event dedicated to their discussion labeled them “Architects of
Change.”
If the women themselves do not ask these
questions, neither does the press in its coverage of the event, and
neither do voters — at least not immediately. When the
presidential race begins as early as this one did, it is to be
expected that no one pay that much attention to the candidates or
their spouses. At Columbia, our own political issues take center
stage, and I doubt that many students have enough time to follow
CNN’s coverage of John Edwards’ haircuts.
It is nearly impossible to avoid the
media’s coverage of all the supposedly relevant aspects of a
campaign: personal affairs, faux pas, statements of the candidate’s
spouses. Oftentimes, it is up to us to take a step back and question
why it is that we may like or dislike a candidate, and how these
preferences may unconsciously reinforce our perception of gender
roles in society. And if these women unabashedly take a back seat
role in the husband’s campaigns, it is no wonder that our gender
perceptions are such as they are.
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