{"id":1126229,"date":"2024-06-22T11:26:51","date_gmt":"2024-06-22T15:26:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/uncategorized\/are-republican-women-okay-new-york-magazine\/"},"modified":"2024-06-22T11:26:51","modified_gmt":"2024-06-22T15:26:51","slug":"are-republican-women-okay-new-york-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/republican\/are-republican-women-okay-new-york-magazine\/","title":{"rendered":"Are Republican Women Okay? &#8211; New York Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>        From left, Elizabeth Dole, Barbara Bush, Kay        Bailey Hutchison, Kristi Noem, Nancy Mace, and Valentina        Gomez. Photo: Porter Gifford\/Liaison        (Dole); Ron Sachs\/Consolidated News Picture (Bush); Joe        Raedle\/Getty Images (Hutchison); Jeff Dean\/AP Photo (Noem);        Evelyn Hockstein\/Reuters (Mace)      <\/p>\n<p>    This article was featured in One Great Story,    New Yorks reading recommendation newsletter.     Sign up here to get it nightly.  <\/p>\n<p>        Can you provide a definition for the word woman?      <\/p>\n<p>    Tennessee senator Marsha Blackburn    lobbed this query at Ketanji Brown    Jackson during her     2022 Supreme Court confirmation hearings. Blackburn was    doing her bit for her partys effort to enforce transphobic    gender conformity, positioning herself as a defender of    womanhood as something fixed and narrow. When Jackson declined    to provide Blackburn with a definition, noting that she was not    a biologist, the senator took the opportunity to dial it up a    notch. The fact that you cant give me a straight answer about    something as fundamental as what a woman is underscores the    dangers of the kind of progressive education that we are    hearing about, Blackburn said with lip-smacking satisfaction.  <\/p>\n<p>    Two years later, Republicans remain cruelly closed to the    realities of gender fluidity and trans existence. But how the    party understands  and represents  womanhood more broadly?    Well  thats getting weird. As we cruise toward November with    two ancient white men on the presidential ticket and the rights    of millions of people who are not white men in the balance, the    public performance of Republican womanhood has become    fractured, frenzied, and far less coherent than ever.  <\/p>\n<p>    A true conservative woman, Valentina Gomez, one of several    Republican candidates vying to be Missouris next secretary of    state, told me in an email this spring, speaks the truth,    works hard, loves and knows how to use guns of multiple    calibers, cares for the wellbeing of children and her family,    doesnt sleep with multiple men and most important, does not    murder babies.  <\/p>\n<p>    The 25-year-old Gomez made a viral ad in February in which she    took a flamethrower to a pile of sex-education and LGBTQ+ books    from the public library. In May, she filmed herself running    through St. Louis wearing a weighted vest and advising, Dont    be weak and gay; stay fucking hard. The day before, she had    embraced her softer side, posting a photo of herself on X in a    pale-pink pantsuit and pumps, with a winning smile and her eyes    cast heavenward, under a caption restating Blackburns    question: What is a woman?  <\/p>\n<p>    Gomez told me feminists have made men the enemy, adding,    they end up alone with three dogs at the age of 50 with no    kids or husband  a time-honored Republican sentiment that    liberal women, unlike conservatives, are sexless,    unmarriageable spinsters. But even that rusty rhetorical frame    is wobbly: In April, 31-year-old far-right activist Laura Loomer,    standing outside Donald    Trumps criminal trial in New York, told the New York        Times, You think I have a dating life?    You think Im married? You think Ihave kids? Do you think I go    out and do fun things? No. Because Im always putting every    extra bit of time that I have into supporting President Trump.    Loomer told the paper she would not be at the courthouse the    next week because she had to return home to Florida to take    care of her dogs.  <\/p>\n<p>    Contradictions abound among conservative women in Washington.    In response to Jacksons testimony, Georgia representative    Marjorie    Taylor Greene attempted to be authoritative on the matter.    Im going to tell you right now what is a woman, she said.    We came from Adams rib. God created us with his hands. We may    be the weaker sex  we are the weaker sex  but we are our    partners, our husbands, wife. But Greene, who has since    divorced, regularly refers to men, including Speaker     Mike Johnson and President Biden, as    weak and is not shy about showing off her own brawn. In May,    in the wake of a dustup with Democratic Texas representative    Jasmine Crockett in which the two traded barbs about each    others appearance, Greene posted a video of herself lifting    heavy weights to a song by Sia: Im unstoppable\/Im a    Porsche with no brakes\/Im invincible\/Yeah, I win every    single game.  <\/p>\n<p>    Under the surface, subcutaneously, there is a tug-of-war,    said Nancy    Mace, a 46-year-old second-term Republican congresswoman    from South Carolina. Mace was reflecting on the tension between    presenting as traditionally feminine and deploying emasculating    language that can make her sound more like     Andrew Tate and his overheated manosphere buddies than    Republican foremothers such as Margaret Chase Smith or even    Michele    Bachmann. Mace regularly declares that her male enemies,    including former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy,    with whom she has a bitter rivalry, and Hunter Biden, the    presidents son, have no balls.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are the traditional roles of women in society, some    biological. Were meant to nurture; were meant to breastfeed    our kids, Mace told me over Zoom. But my mom worked. Ive    worked my entire life since Iwas 15. Its a balance between    whats your feminine side and your Main Character Energy. Mace    was explicit: I do have Main Character Energy. I am an alpha    dog, and so is my little six-pound dog, Libby.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Republican women seeking to steer their party into the    future are finding themselves in a series of constrictive    binds: between upholding a conservative white patriarchy that    has outlawed abortion and asserting their value as women;    between projecting traditional notions of compliant, cheerful    femininity and channeling the testosterone-driven rage of the    conservative infotainment complex; and, above all, between    trying to build independent political identities and slavishly    following Donald    Trump. That devotion has come at the cost of alienating    suburban white women, who have been crucial to Republicans for    decades but, since 2016, have been peeling away in response to    Trumps pussy-grabbing malevolence and his partys ruthless    campaign against reproductive rights.  <\/p>\n<p>    Its surely a nasty tangle for them, but for those of us    watching at home, Republican womens efforts to bridge these    impossible chasms have a stupefying quality: What to    make of these women?  <\/p>\n<p>    As the Alabama political columnist Kyle Whitmire wrote after    Katie    Britt, his states U.S. senator, delivered the response to    Joe Bidens State of the Union address from her kitchen in a    demonic whisper, Katie Britt glitched out on national    television and left millions of Americans asking what the heck    they just watched. Weeks later, South Dakota governor Kristi Noems    strenuous efforts to show off her casually cruel streak to    Trump derailed her own vice-presidential audition when it    emerged that her book contained a story about how she once        shot her puppy and left the body to rot in a gravel pit.  <\/p>\n<p>    Then there are the duck-lipped, smoky-eyed stylings of Donald Trump    Jr.s fiance, Kimberly    Guilfoyle, who danced to Gloria shortly before    insurrectionists tore through the Capitol on January 6, 2021, and    this spring announced a childrens book called The Princess    & Her Pup. The former presidents daughter-in-law, RNC    co-chair Lara    Trump, recently promised four years of scorched earth when    Donald Trump retakes the White House and posted a    video of herself in sequined pants and stilettos as she played    Let It Be on piano. The gun-toting congresswoman Lauren    Boebert has railed against teaching kids how to have and    enjoy sex, even same-sex sex, how to pleasure themselves, yet    last fall was ejected from a theater for lewd behavior that    included grabbing her dates crotch during the performance.    Mace made headlines in 2023 for joking about her sex life to a    roomful of Christian conservatives at a prayer breakfast.  <\/p>\n<p>    Some of this is surely just old-fashioned political hypocrisy,    particularly unpleasant coming from a right that has for    generations sought to police all sorts of things that it itself    engages in: Do as I legislate, not as I do. But in a    post-Dobbs political climate in which Republicans have    grown only more aggressive on issues of gender identity,    contraception, and sex education, the ways in which the partys    women have been comporting themselves loom large.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the cusp of an election season that could further reshape    this democracy and womens place within it, the questions    facing the women of the American right are tricky. Are they    supposed to be cutthroat or cute? Cold enough to kill a dog or    warm enough to bake an apple pie? To whom is their devotion    chiefly addressed: country, husband, God, or Trump? And how    might their womanhood complicate their responses to the closing    of obstetrics wards or the fact that their partys leader was    convicted of falsifying business records to cover up an    extramarital affair with an adult-film actress?  <\/p>\n<p>    The challenge of navigating these thorny questions has left    many of them caroming from high-pitched rancor, to contorted    eroticism, to the seemingly snug comforts of trad-wife chic.    The spectacle can provoke amusement, fury, and a frisson of    horror-movie unease. For if the women of todays Republican Party    are upending gender conventions in unprecedented fashion,    theyre doing it in service of a party that has never been more    openly hostile to women and their rights.  <\/p>\n<p>      Lauren Boebert with Trump in a LETS GO BRANDON dress.      Photo: Lauren Boebert\/X    <\/p>\n<p>    In both parties, women have never had it easy; this is a    business that remains, 235 years in, overwhelmingly run by men.    And for a time, it was Democratic women who encountered the    gnarlier complexities.  <\/p>\n<p>    As members of the party that at least theoretically represented    the gains of the womens movement that were so disruptive to    the old gendered order, they could not themselves present as    too aggressive for fear of being seen as radical, nor could    they be too vulnerable, feminine, or even conventionally    beautiful lest they be dismissed as unserious. Jennifer    Granholm, a former pageant contestant and the first woman    to govern Michigan, has described cutting her hair short and    trying to add gray streaks when she ran her first campaign in    1998. You had to look completely asexual, she once    said. The first thing they think about is how you are    shaped, what you are wearing. You have to be as neutral as    possible so that people will pay attention to the words coming    out of your mouth.  <\/p>\n<p>    Meeting ridiculous gendered expectations could mean ridiculous    micro-humiliations: When Hillary Clinton    told reporters in 1992 that she had chosen to pursue a paid    profession rather than stay home to bake cookies, she was    pressured to participate in a First-Lady Bake-Off to prove    her wifely chops. Fifteen years later, during her first    presidential run, the presence of a body that was not male was    such an anomaly on the campaign trail that the Washington        Post published a fashion feature about how she was    choosing to handle her cleavage. Clinton was perhaps the most    acute example of an assertive Democratic woman whose efforts to    satisfy a ravening press and public intolerant of female    complexity left her so twisted and poll-tested that she became    largely illegible as human, let alone female.  <\/p>\n<p>    Meanwhile, Republican women faced limitations of their own but    for a long time appeared at ease with them. Many came off as    maternal and content, conservatively coiffed and    shoulder-padded, a comfortable match for a party that wanted to    offer reassurance to a nation jittery about womens liberation.    Think Elizabeth Dole, a Reagan Cabinet member, future senator,    and presidential candidate whose chatty, Oprah-style stroll    through the crowd on the night of her husbands 1996    presidential nomination was the (sole) highlight of that    convention. But they could also be tough and mean  Barbara Bush once    called Geraldine Ferraro a bitch!  <\/p>\n<p>    The Republican Party, through the 1990s and into the new    millennium, included quite a few moderate women, such as Kay    Bailey Hutchison of Texas and Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of    Maine, who believed in fiscal conservatism but also held    positions on so-called social issues that were comparatively    liberal. They were, like many in their party before its sharp    anti-abortion turn, pro-choice. They worked with Democrats to    reach compromises, and the women on both sides of the aisle    appeared to be friendly with one another: Collins partnered    with Kirsten    Gillibrand on the repeal of dont ask, dont tell, and    Gillibrand helped then-Senator Clinton throw Collins a bridal    shower.  <\/p>\n<p>    A turning point in the evolution of conservative womanhood came    when John    McCain selected a little-known governor of Alaska to be his    running mate in his presidential race against Barack    Obama in 2008.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sarah Palin    was in her mid-40s, young enough not to be collared by the    pearls and propriety that inhibited many of her forerunners in    both parties. She was charismatic and uninterested in    conforming to outdated gender stereotypes. Or rather, she    conformed to a bunch of them simultaneously: She had a    sexy-librarian beauty and no qualms about playing it up; a    macho snow-machine-racing husband who had taken a leave from    his job on the oil fields to be the primary parent to their    five kids; and she used her youngest child, Trig, born with    Down syndrome, as proof of her hard-core anti-abortion bona    fides. She had white-nationalist instincts that led her to    counter Obama with language about real Americans, and she    pioneered a Mama Grizzly persona that was both sporty and    menacing (fuck your dead puppy; this lady wanted wolves to be    shot from helicopters). She was unafraid to stake her own claim    to womens equality, advocating for a new, conservative    feminism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Balancing these divergent identities came naturally to Palin,    and she was, at first, chillingly effective, the best to ever    play the game of covering the cognitive dissonance of the    rights anti-woman policies with high-gloss girl power. What    was the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull?    Lipstick, losers.  <\/p>\n<p>    But if Palin was a model for a new generation of right-wing    women, she was also a fundamentally unstable molecule.  <\/p>\n<p>    McCain had hired Palin as a gimmick rather than as a colleague    and thus had no idea what to do with her. His campaign fed her    straight into the blades of the press, which exposed such deep    ignorance of basic policy questions that Tina Fey could parody    her on Saturday Night Live by simply repeating what    she had said. But even had they prepared and protected Palin    better, the combustibility of what she brought to the table was    a preview of the metaphysical impossibility of women gaining    real power on the right.  <\/p>\n<p>    She was a star and then, almost immediately, too much of one.    Palins poor media showing would be blamed for her tickets    loss, but the eagerness to throw her under the bus surely    stemmed in part from irritation: She had not been subservient.    She had, famously, gone rogue. She had outshone the man at    the top of the ticket.  <\/p>\n<p>    The brutal irony of women on the right is that their emergence    as mighty politicians is reliant entirely on feminist gains,    and their experiences track with the feminist critique of    inequality, including expectations of acquiescence to powerful    men. Palins self-assured ethos was made possible by the    womens movement that she was interested in co-opting for    herself  and which the modern Republican Party is seeking to    destroy.  <\/p>\n<p>    It was in the post-Palin flameout that the contours of that    vengeful project would cease to be subtext and instead become    mainstream conservative liturgy. The    white-Christian-nationalist brand of Republicanism Palin    embodied previewed the rise of the tea party and the rights    relentless drive to defund Planned Parenthood, an agenda    accompanied by an open disregard for and cluelessness about    women and their bodies.  <\/p>\n<p>    During Obamas first term, Republicans at the state level    pushed through TRAP laws mandating that abortion clinics have    wide hallways or that doctors tell patients about wholly    fictionalized ties between abortion and breast cancer.    Missouris Todd    Akin proclaimed that in cases of legitimate rape, the    female body has ways to shut that whole thing down, while    radio host     Rush Limbaugh said law student Sandra Fluke, who    had testified in front of Congress about requiring    contraceptive insurance for students, was a slut who was    having sex so frequently that she cant afford all the    birth-control pills that she needs. This period saw the    calcification of the Republican universe we now inhabit, in    which, just this past February, Alabama senator Tommy Tuberville    defended his states brief curtailment of IVF services by    repeatedly insisting that the decision made sense because we    need to have more kids.  <\/p>\n<p>    The possibilities of earlier eras, in which a fiscal    conservatism could be imaginatively walled off from social    revanchism, thus mitigating contradictions for women like Snowe    and Collins and Hutchison, were foreclosed by a post-Obama,    post-Palin, post-tea-party right that was flagrant, excited    even, about its ability to demean women. Some of the old-guard    moderates, including Snowe and Hutchison, left their posts,    while those who stayed began to turn right, in line with their    ever more misogynistic party.  <\/p>\n<p>      Valentina Gomez taking a flamethrower to sex-education books.      Photo: Valentina Gomez\/Instagram    <\/p>\n<p>    When the Republican Party of Palin first began to make way for    the Republican Party of Trump, he was still best known as a    reality-television star. He was the owner of the Miss Universe    pageant, a serial adulterer who had cheated on two of his wives    and was married to a woman who appeared to be his ideal: a    simulacrum of every sculpted, shiny, glittery, enhanced    expectation of femininity. Here was a man who regarded women    with wolf-whistling lasciviousness or dismissed them as pigs    and dogs. As a presidential candidate, he expressed revulsion    for female bodies, claiming that debate host Megyn Kelly had    blood coming out of her wherever and calling Clintons    bathroom break during a debate disgusting. He was accused by    more than a dozen women of sexual assault. When he became    president, he stacked the Supreme Court with    anti-abortion zealots who proceeded to strike down    Roe.  <\/p>\n<p>    For the women in his party who want to gain any political    authority, submitting to him and conforming to his standards is    the only path to survival, and womanly fealty to Trump can be    vividly expressed by meeting the physical demands of his    universe.  <\/p>\n<p>    For years, the right promoted a very particular version of    conservative femininity via its Fox News arm. Lithe blonde    couriers of white panic over Black Santa and Sharia were one of        Roger Ailess innovations, and Kelly, Gretchen    Carlson, Laura    Ingraham, and others gained powerful public perches in    exchange for their chaturanga-toned arms and poisonous    propaganda. That many of them would eventually come forward to    tell of the grotesque     harassment and sexual abuse they experienced while working    at Fox is perhaps the ultimate portrait in miniature of the    dynamic in which women on the right so often find themselves    embroiled.  <\/p>\n<p>    But if the sleek women of Fox were one model of idealized    feminine aesthetics, this era demands a different look, one    constructed not to Ailess tastes but to Trumps.  <\/p>\n<p>    Kristi Noem, like Palin, began her political life as a female    herald of the hard-right turn her party was making, elected to    the House of Representatives in the tea-party sweep of 2010. A    former rancher, she came to office opposed to abortion and    marriage equality. Noem was always classically attractive, a    Jennifer Aniston look-alike who at the start of her political    career worked a rural white middle-class-mom vibe: practical    trousers, ill-fitting blazers, weed-whacked hair (there but for    the grace of God go any of us).  <\/p>\n<p>    Noem became a conservative superstar in 2020 when, as South    Dakotas governor, she refused to implement any    COVID-mitigation efforts in her state. In 2021, the    Times described her eagerness to project a rugged    Great Plains Woman image. The next year, her first memoir,    Not My First Rodeo, featured a cover image of Noem    sitting astride a horse, in a cowboy hat and a    red-white-and-blue western blouse.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the years since COVID, in which the rights affirmation    clearly filled her with the ambition to ascend alongside Trump    himself, Noem has undertaken an astonishing physical    transformation. Gone are the boxy do and blazers; she now    sports long, highlighted waves. Her cheekbones are angular, her    lips pillowy, her eyelashes go on forever, and she wears    body-skimming dresses. As Vanessa Friedman of the New York    Times observed, Noem has begun to resemble a    doppelganger for Kimberly Guilfoyle or a dark-haired version    of Lara Trump  in other words, Trumps kind of woman. Youre    not allowed to say shes beautiful, so Im not going to say    it, Trump said approvingly of Noem earlier this year.  <\/p>\n<p>    Generations of women of both parties have been caught in this    finger trap. When your value is tied inextricably to sexualized    standards contrived by white men, you will not be appreciated,    sometimes not even seen, unless you meet those    standards. Yet if you do hit their (often shifting) aesthetic    marks, you risk being degraded by those same men, not taken    seriously as their peers but rather understood as their    ornament.  <\/p>\n<p>    In March, Noem cut an infomercial for the Texas dental practice    that gave her a new set of front teeth. She said she wanted    people to focus on my thoughts and ideas, instead of her    allegedly flawed teeth, unconsciously echoing Granholm, who    made herself dowdier for the same purpose. Thanks to the team    at Smile Texas, she continued, I can be confident when I    smile at people, and know that they can actually appreciate and    see the kindness in my face and know the love I have for them.  <\/p>\n<p>    For Republican women less driven to cosmetic enhancement, there    is another, more traditional expressive model still available:    that of the demure maternal presence. Yet those working this    angle are also plying their cozy wares in a manner that jibes    with the despotic nihilism of Trumpian America, producing    messaging that can feel like an unnerving subversion of    maternal tropes as much as a reinforcement of them.  <\/p>\n<p>    Katie Britt is the youngest Republican woman ever elected to    the Senate, a 42-year-old mother of two married to a former NFL    player. The pretty white straight woman dating the football    player was surely once one of the conservative universes holy    archetypes until gay-friendly Taylor Swift and her    vaccine-loving boyfriend, Travis Kelce,    scrambled conservative brains and sent a right-wing media into    seething paroxysms of vilification and paranoia.  <\/p>\n<p>    After the Swift-Kelce meltdown came Britts rebuttal to Bidens    State of the Union address, recorded in her homes sparse    kitchen, a glinting cross around her neck. Here was the remnant    of the delicate and devout figure the right has long advertised    as its heart and soul, the retro view of the comforting lady    unadorned by anything but her love for Jesus, ready to make you    dinner  while also working as a senator.  <\/p>\n<p>    Then Britt began to talk. And out came a gruesome tale of how    the American Dream has turned into a nightmare for so many    families. If it werent for her eyelash batting, the speech    would have been a direct callback to Trumps inaugural 2017    address about American carnage. Britt told the story of a    woman shed met who had been sex-trafficked by the cartels    starting at the age of 12 and whod shared with her not just    that she was raped every day but how many times a day she was    raped. (Freelance reporter Jonathan M. Katz would quickly    identify the woman Britt was describing as Karla Jacinto    Romero, an advocate whod had this horrific experience between    2004 and 2008, when Republican George W. Bush was    president, and not even in the United States.)  <\/p>\n<p>    By grossly misrepresenting the experiences of a woman of color,    Britt was working an age-old reactionary script of white    American womanhood being vulnerable to violent sexual    incursions by Black and brown people. Yet her fixation on the    lurid details struck a contemporary note, one played often in    the more conspiratorial corners of the right-wing internet, as    if for a brief period she really had been possessed by the    voices of Truth Social and was broadcasting them to the nation    direct from her home in the uncanny valley. In fact, older    videos would show that the breathy, baleful voice she adopted    was nothing like her actual, perfectly normal voice.  <\/p>\n<p>    Even Britts views on abortion, which are typical for a    conservative Republican from the South, have taken on a more    frightening cast. In May, she released a video advertising the    MOMS Act, which she described, with a smile so aggressive it    was audible, as a way to support Americans through typically    challenging phases of motherhood. The bills approach to these    challenging phases almost exclusively entails ensuring that no    one ends a pregnancy: It includes the words abortion,    terminate, and kill the unborn child 17 times but    offers only two references to housing and three to    childcare.  <\/p>\n<p>    Use of the white mother figure in the past was meant to signal    the preservation of the private family sphere from the    purported overreach of government: no federal officials    reaching their sticky collectivist fingers into your home,    telling you how to raise your children. But now, empowered by    Dobbs, Britts motherly warmth was being deployed on    behalf of a government project that would gather information    about location, menstrual cycles, and pregnancy on behalf of a    party that would like your friends to turn you in if you end    that pregnancy. It recalled the hissed threat of Britts State    of the Union response: We see you; we hear you.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps no elected official embodies the contortions of the    modern Republican woman more than Mace, who was first sworn in    to the House of Representatives on January 3, 2021. Three days    later, her workplace was under attack by insurrectionists,    anathema to a woman raised on military order. Her father was    commandant of the Citadel, the South Carolina military academy    of which Mace, in 1999, became the first female graduate. She    denounced Trump after January 6, telling CNN the presidents    entire legacy was wiped out by the coup attempt and later    arguing that we have to hold the president accountable for    what happened.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Citadel shaped Maces identity in more ways than one. Her    2001 book, In the Company of Men, tells the story of    her experience there: the scrutiny of her physical    presentation, sexist intimidation, harassment. This is a    politician, in other words, who has thought a lot about gender,    power, and inclusion. When we spoke in May, she smiled at me    warily and said, Yeah, in the party, Im a unicorn. She has,    for example, announced her intent to work on legislation with    Democrat Ro Khanna to make child care more affordable.    Collectively, as a party, were not traditionally seen as    pro-woman, and Im trying to change the narrative, she said.    Its a rather lonely experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mace is enthusiastically anti-abortion but broke with her party    when she was in the South Carolina legislature during a 2019    debate on a fetal-heartbeat bill that included no exceptions    for rape or incest. No one was talking about rape, she said.    I felt shattered as a woman because I am a rape survivor.    Mace had been sexually assaulted at 16. I took the microphone    and went to the well, and I gave a speech I never thought I    would ever give, she said.  <\/p>\n<p>    Maces story mirrors the 2013 experience of thenState    Legislator Gretchen Whitmer, who, in the midst of a Michigan    senate debate over a bill requiring separate health insurance    for abortion coverage, surprised herself and advisers by    putting her notes aside and speaking extemporaneously about how    she had been raped more than 20 years earlier. But for Whitmer,    a Democrat, her firsthand experience of assault and its    connection to abortion access fit seamlessly with the rest of    her politics. For Mace, the connections are far harder to draw.  <\/p>\n<p>    Im a pro-life member in a pro-choice district, said Mace.    Im willing to find common sense and common ground. When we    knew Roe was going to be overturned, Iwent straight    to the microphone; I went straight to writing op-eds, doing    interviews, being the voice of reason. Because I saw the    visceral reaction in my district and I said, Im not leaving    these women behind. Her solution, she said, is a ban at    somewhere between 15 and 20weeks. In 2023, Mace introduced a    bill to protect contraceptive access, calling it just common    sense. She introduced a resolution denouncing the Alabama IVF    ruling, a position she called a no-brainer.  <\/p>\n<p>    Back in 2021, Mace did not, ultimately, vote for Trumps    impeachment. But he remembered the slight of her initial rebuke    and endorsed Maces 2022 primary challenger. Mace tried to win    him back by traveling to Trump Tower and posting a video    documenting her devotion to him; he responded by calling her a    grand-standing loser. Mace survived her reelection bid thanks    in part to the backing of Trumps future primary rival, former    South Carolina governor Nikki Haley.  <\/p>\n<p>    When I asked Mace if there were any women in politics she    regarded as models, she replied, I respect the hell out of    Nikki Haley. She has shattered glass ceilings her entire life.    She has stayed true to her values and her principles; I think    shes a remarkable woman. Yet in January, Mace endorsed Trump    over Haley. I respect her so much, Mace said when I asked her    about this incongruity. But I could see as clear as day that    Donald Trump was who South Carolinians want, hand over fist.  <\/p>\n<p>    She also insisted that Donald Trump is good on womens issues.    He was the most pro-woman candidate in the presidential    primary. And he gets it. Never mind that Trump has called the    end of Roe a -miracle. He poohpoohs claims that he    would restrict contraceptive access one day and say hes open    to state restrictions the next. He has called the    state-by-state fight over whether abortion will remain    accessible a beautiful thing to watch. It is very difficult    to maintain a moderate keel through rhetorical gates like this.  <\/p>\n<p>    Here is the quandary of the ambitious Republican woman laid    bare. Maces history and profile  her time at the Citadel, her    experience of assault, her admiration for the women who paved    her way into politics, her self-professed moderation on    abortion  might have put her in a position to reclaim the new    conservative feminism Palin had staked out. Much of that gets    warped by the pull of Trump and his politics of domination, a    centripetal force that demands the breaking of bonds with    mentors, adherence to day-is-night lies and inconsistency, the    humiliating recanting of past criticisms, and de facto support    of an abortion agenda more extreme than it has ever been.    Maces efforts were rewarded: In 2024, Trump endorsed her and    she won her primary bid on June 11 by 27 points.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is surely a perverse pride in emerging victorious near    the top of a power structure built to exclude you. These are    the dynamics that have long rewarded white women for acting as    foot soldiers within a white patriarchy, willing to take one    another out to get closer to power, their positions adjacent to    the brutes at the top a signal of their uncommon tenacity. But    there is a difference between the status granted those willing    to do whatever unhinged thing it takes to get ahead in    contemporary right-wing politics and the political autonomy    these women might yearn for just as much as the classical    feminists they wage war against.  <\/p>\n<p>    When Valentina Gomez agreed to respond to my emailed questions,    I noted that she had used MAGA to describe her politics and    wondered whether she saw a distinction between MAGA and the    Republican Party. I do not use MAGA, Gomez corrected me. I    am MAGA and The Future of the Republican Party. Gomez told me    she developed her political ideals while swimming Division I,    graduating from college at 19, earning an M.B.A. at 21, and    building a real estate empire with my family  all    achievements enabled by the feminist movement. But, she said,    feminism is exactly like the Trans Movement, they are both    doomed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mace too turned to certain tools of feminist argument. During    the Hunter Biden no balls hearing, she used the language of    grievance when she was interrupted, asking, Are women allowed    to speak here or no? In our conversation, she criticized    former Speaker Kevin McCarthy for pushing only one major    womens bill (as it happens, a piece of anti-trans    legislation). Mace went on, I cant tell you how offensive    that was as a Republican woman knowing how important womens    issues were going to be. His chauvinism was ridiculous. And his    misogyny and sexism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mace also cried misogyny when ABC News George Stephanopoulos    asked her during an interview how, as a rape survivor, she    could support Trump. And while it is true this question should    be addressed to all supporters of Trump, not just those who    have experienced sexual assault, Mace deflected the challenging    question by claiming Stephanopoulos was rape-shaming her.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the past, it was easier for Republican women to get away    with inconsistency and self-contradiction. Phyllis Schlafly,    the brilliant, diabolical political strategist, could inveigh    against the masculinized ambitions of women working outside the    home from pulpits well outside her own home because her    professional efforts paid lip service to restoring certain    comforting hierarchical expectations about mens and womens    spheres.  <\/p>\n<p>    That paradigm has been subverted. What Schlafly and her    generation feared most  that the expanded opportunities and    protections for women would become their own kind of    traditional expectation  has come to pass. This is why the    overturn of Roe was not greeted as some welcome    restoration of a bygone order but as a threatening attack on    the protections that plenty of American women, especially white    middle-class women of all political persuasions, had come to    count on as an established norm during the 49 years    Roe stood.  <\/p>\n<p>    Every one of these Republican women relies on the gains of    womens liberation, and well they should. This was, in fact,    what the womens movement was for: not just so those who agreed    with it might enjoy more opportunities but so those who did not    agree with it also could. As an early political ballbuster,    former New York congresswoman Bella Abzug famously said, We    dont want so much to see a female Einstein become an assistant    professor. We want a woman schlemiel to get promoted as quickly    as a male schlemiel. Welcome, ladies.  <\/p>\n<p>    Remarkably, these dark years have seen women on the left    conduct themselves with new ease and assuredness. Democratic    women at both the center and the left edge of their party now    communicate in a range of styles that appear more authentic and    less stilted than those of previous generations of female    politicians. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is fluent on social    media; Elizabeth Warren lets her professorial freak flag fly;    Ayanna Pressley is bald and beautiful. They tell stories of    abortion, of assault, of pregnancy and childbirth, of their gay    and trans offspring, of their disabilities and military    service, weaving the facts of their lives into arguments for    civil rights, health-care access, and housing.  <\/p>\n<p>    Whitmer is perhaps the most prominent Democratic woman to    experiment with mixing a traditional white femininity and    historically masculine cadences. Though her politics could not    be more different, she is perhaps the closest we have yet seen    to a natural echo of Palins swashbuckling cheek. In May,    Whitmer wore a fuchsia wrap dress to pick up an award for a    campaign she undertook as Governor Barbie. Her five-word    acceptance speech was Wear pink; get shit done. In the days    after Noems disastrous book tour, Whitmer took a break from    posting about the NFL draft to put up a photograph of her with    her two dogs, Kevin and Doug, with the caption, Post a picture    with your dog that doesnt involve shooting them and throwing    them in a gravel pit.  <\/p>\n<p>    Its certainly all performed in its own way. But for the first    time, its the Democratic women who can articulate the mix of    football and Barbie and health care and labor without tripping    over themselves, who seem more comfortable in their own bodies.    The women on the right appear in perpetual confusion and find    themselves, like some negative image of Clinton, twisting into    something unrecognizable.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is nothing inherently wrong with wearing pink and making    testicle jokes. Though shooting dogs is not nice and giving    hand jobs during Beetlejuice is rude, they are part of    a range of impulses a free society should be open to evaluating    on their own merits, regardless of the gender of the person    engaging in them. If you could separate it from the regressive    politics, there might be something exhilarating about Marjorie    Taylor Greenes willingness to throw weights around and toss    off suffocating norms of feminized civility in the workplace.  <\/p>\n<p>    But there is no way to understand these varied approaches to    gender expression outside the context of their own political    aims. These are politicians who regularly refer to    gender-affirming health care as castration and mutilation.    Boebert famously campaigned against drag story hours, while    Noem wrote to South Dakotas college board asking it to ban    campus drag shows. Republican women longing to attach    themselves to the feminist brand leverage transphobia to do it,    a riff on the TERF movement currently flourishing in the U.K.    Mace has argued that conservatives laboring to keep trans women    out of athletic competitions are the feminists of today, and    Haley has cast anti-trans policymaking as the womens issue of    our time.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet these women express themselves via a dizzying mash-up of    gendered conventions: They augment their smiles, bedazzle their    pantsuits, and broadcast their bench presses. In their fevered    performances of hyperfemininity and hypermasculinity, so many    of the GOPs most visible women are themselves engaging in a    form of drag.  <\/p>\n<p>    Of course, drag in its queer context offers the chance to slip    from and send up the constricting bounds of gender norms, to    encourage empathy and celebrate diverse forms of identity. The    show these Republican politicians are putting on is its cold    opposite: asphyxiated, distended, nasty. Theirs is surely    drags gothic inverse.  <\/p>\n<p>    Still, it is possible to catch a glimpse of pathos beneath the    performance because the show covers for something awful and    real: The identities of those women are no more valued or    recognized by the party for which they labor than gay or trans    or feminist identities are. Women fundamentally cannot lead a    party that wants to oppress women; they cannot, in fact, even    be fully human within it.  <\/p>\n<p>      Thank you for subscribing and supporting our      journalism. If you prefer to read      in print, you can also find this article in the June 17,      2024, issue of New      YorkMagazine.    <\/p>\n<p>      Want more stories like this one?       Subscribe now to support our journalism and get unlimited      access to our coverage. If you prefer to read in print, you      can also find this article in the June 17, 2024, issue of      New York Magazine.    <\/p>\n<p>              The one story you shouldnt miss today, selected              byNew Yorks editors.            <\/p>\n<p>            By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and            Privacy            Notice and to receive email correspondence from us.          <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read more:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/nymag.com\/intelligencer\/article\/conservatives-republican-party-women-rebecca-traister.html\" title=\"Are Republican Women Okay? - New York Magazine\">Are Republican Women Okay? - New York Magazine<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> From left, Elizabeth Dole, Barbara Bush, Kay Bailey Hutchison, Kristi Noem, Nancy Mace, and Valentina Gomez. Photo: Porter Gifford\/Liaison (Dole); Ron Sachs\/Consolidated News Picture (Bush); Joe Raedle\/Getty Images (Hutchison); Jeff Dean\/AP Photo (Noem); Evelyn Hockstein\/Reuters (Mace) This article was featured in One Great Story, New Yorks reading recommendation newsletter.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/republican\/are-republican-women-okay-new-york-magazine\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[345640],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1126229","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-republican"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1126229"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1126229"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1126229\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1126229"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1126229"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1126229"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}