PBS To The Contrary. Nice Attacks and RNC; Masculinity and Election; Jennifer Aniston. Host: Bonnie Erbe. July 15, 2016

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PBS To The Contrary Nice Attacks and RNC; Masculinity and Election; Jennifer Aniston Host: Bonnie Erbe July 15, 2016 Panelists: Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, Rina Shah Bharara, Anushay Hossain, Julie Gunlock PLEASE CREDIT ANY QUOTES OR EXCERPTS FROM THIS PBS PROGRAM TO PBS TO THE CONTRARY Announcer: Funding for To The Contrary provided by the Oak Foundation, the Colcom Foundation, and the Charles A. Frueauff Foundation Bonnie Erbe: This week on To The Contrary Presidential candidates respond to the deadly attack in France and diverse voters and the G.O.P. Convention. Then masculinity in the presidential race. And Jennifer Aniston takes on the tabloids saying their are sexist coverage harms women and girls. [ ] Erbe: Hello I'm Bonnie Erbe welcome to to the contrary a discussion of news and social trends from diverse perspectives. Up first, the terrorist attack in France and unrest at home impact the presidential race as it enters a new phase. As republicans gather in Cleveland for their convention Donald trump supporters hope to bar any conflict by his opponents in the party or violence by demonstrators outside the hall. Trump is also hoping his vice-presidential pick will unite the G.O.P. Unity was this week's theme for Hillary Clinton. She spoke at the old state House in Illinois where Abraham Lincoln delivered his historic house divided speech nearly 160 years ago. She portrayed herself as the only candidate capable of bringing the country together. Hillary Clinton: My life's work is built on the conviction that we are stronger together. Not separated into factions or sides. Not shouting over each other. But together.

Erbe: But trump uncharacteristicly touched on unity in the week leading up to his party's convention in a video reacting to the Dallas massacre of police. Trump: Too many head lines flash across our screens everyday about the rising crime and rising death tolls in our cities. Now is the time for prayers, love, unity and leadership. Erbe: Polls show a tight race. A "New York times" /CBS poll had Clinton and Trump in a dead heat. That after she was six points ahead the week before. FBI Director James Comey accused her of gross negligence in the private server e-mail scandal. Clinton this week finally received the endorsement of Democratic rival Bernie Sanders. Erbe: So, Rina Shah, which candidate will be better at uniting the country over racial tensions and/or protecting the country against terrorism? Rina Shah Bharara: Neither. Both have showed a failure to bring people together in all these weeks and months they have been stumping. I'm very unhopeful, let's say, for November. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton: You know, in temperament and experience Clinton is way ahead. When it comes to Trump there is one issue: Trump. Julie Gunlock: I agree. But I will say Hillary, during the debates called Republicans her enemy. She wants to be the unifying candidate she has to prove that she can be the candidate for both Republicans and Democrats. Anushay Hossain: I think to see who will be more unifying you have to look at your kids. My five-year-old asked me if Donald Trump is a bad guy and Hillary's recent ad about what are our kids are listening to just by hearing trump speak, there is no doubt that it s going to be Hillary. Erbe: Let's talk first about the convention which you may or may not be attending as a delegate because the Trump people are opposing you because you were bound to Marco Rubio. And they, what, They don't like that? Shah Bharara: Donald Trump did not win votes in Washington D.C. I was bound to Marco Rubio and made anti-trump comments and Trump supporters saw to it that I really fought a challenge. And so I am in the midst of the challenge, whether I will be there Monday has yet to be seen. But more importantly here, I look at the textbook definition of unity and that is oneness and that is not being divided and respect for one another's ideas. And I reason I said neither candidate on both sides--and Donald J Trump is not my party s presumptive nominee and he has failed, utterly failed, to bring people to the camp and say look this is a party for all of us. We may have varying differing ideas but this is how we can move together as one. And I think Hillary has the same challenge. All the weeks and months she has not been able to grab that millennial vote and so what are we stuck with two divided people at the helm. Erbe: Polls show she is getting most of the Sanders following. At least more than half-- Hossain: It's about party unity as well. The Republicans are just falling apart and with Bernie Sanders coming out stumping with Hillary, and I always said this was going to happen.--after the primaries we are going to unite behind our candidate. But the Republicans cannot do that despite the fact they only have one candidate. Norton: I will come back. As a member of the Platform Committee for the national Democratic party, and both Sanders people and Clinton people were there strong and we had --first of all there were 55-45. That shows you

how much they had already won, and what compromise is about. In the end they stood their ground on some issues, but you can see-- Erbe: Well they got the $15 minimum wage but they did not get anything on trade agreements. Norton: No. But they did get some compromise language. We did not want to give the back of our happened to the president of the United States who is supporting the trade agreement. And so we could not go the whole way with them. But you will notice there was no drama coming out of our platform. I wonder whether they are going to pick off the never-trump people one by one as they have picked you off. Shah Bharara: The thing that makes the party for the party in a tough position put me in a tough position is our individual-ness in the party. Look, Bernie Sanders joined the collective. Democrats are known to be more collective. Republicans, whether you like it or not, we can be against each other in the same party and maybe that is what is dividing us. But to be frank, I can be a Rubio person and I can still say no, I will not be voting for Donald Trump. And I'm respected. Erbe: I want to get to the up coming convention. The polls a week before the convention were showing Clinton ahead by about six points and then she had a really bad week with Comey and the FBI. Going into the Cleveland convention, they were dead even on a national scale. There's usually a convention bump of 10 points or so. Will Trump come out 10 points ahead? And will it last? Will he be able to hold on to that? Gunlock: He may, I will say yes we do expect a bump after the convention but it's ha rd to say. There's so much that can happen between now and the end of the convention. By both candidates. There can be incredible slip ups. You know trump has sort of edged-- is catching up to Hillary and some wonder is it because he s been quiet this week. He hasn t had any major missteps and scandals. Polls are a snapshot and what is going on right now but it's very hard to predict what will happen. Erbe: Are the polls relevant? Norton: At this point, hardly. When you look at where Obama was last time you understand that. So each week what happens that week will determine the polls for the week. I don't know what is going to happen here but this is what I expect first of all, they can get anybody to participate. And assuming that that does happen, something is wrong if you do not get a bump out of your convention. Because the conventions are entirely scripted. Erbe: And what is his vice-presidential pick going to do for him, especially among women voters? Hossain: Pick up people who are anti-choice and we were talking earlier -- Erbe: Did we get that already? Hossain: It will re-energize that base, but you know, we re talking about how Pence is against the Muslim ban, so it s going to get interesting how trump kind of back pedals around that but they are on the same page when it comes to women's reproductive health. Erbe: Do you think he will pick up support with Pence? Shah Bharara: It's too early to call because the religious right is certainly for governor Mike Pence but they are feeling betrayed right now especially by the antics of the RNC having fallen right in line with Donald Trump and sort of killing the efforts of free the delegates. It is too early even at this point.

Erbe: But I'm interested in...will he pick up women? Shah Bharara:I don't know that he will. Because we know those women who are hardlined in the party are part of that religious right. The Evangelicals still don t know. They may feel like look, if Cruz is not there, we don t want this, it doesn't matter. Gunlock: Vice-presidential picks don t really move it either way, they don t really have a huge impact-- Erbe: But they try. They try for state pickups. Gunlock: But I think this case -- I think this case is different. Trump has had a real problem with true conservatives and a problem with establishment and he s had a problem with Evangelicals and Pence is the golden boy of all three of those demographics. So I think this was an effort Erbe: What about money? What about donor support? Gunlock: I do not think that s as big of a consideration. Look, we know usually vice-presidential picks are based on they need a swing state or they need a certain demographic of voters and this case it was the base and the establishment and that is critical to Trump. That is what Pence brings. Shah Bharara: And the money has been lacking, that s actually a fair point. The RNC locked A lot of pledges because of the remarks Trump has made. Erbe: And we go into the convention $6 million behind? They need $6 million to pay are not convention? That is unusual. Shah Bharara: And governor pence may bring that to the table. May re-energize that. Look, speaker Paul Ryan, I love him, he s a friend of mine. This guy is like you said, fills those boxes. But boring. Ok. Like who is he going to pick up. Gunlock: But he brings in both executive and he knows congress very well. He was in leadership and he was an executive. So he brings incredible experience on those two fronts. Norton: What he brings is something on the other side of a candidate who has had three wives, bunch of bimbos and everything that all the conservative right is against. They need to re-enforce the enthusiasm of that part of their party which is a huge faction of the party. Erbe: I want to get to terrorism and How does that play in the race, but before that, I have to be a little bit cynical and say now that Trump has got every kid of his speaking during the convention and nobody is talking about this, but some body did ask him if he won the presidency, might he walk away from it? And he said I will get to that if I get there. So is this really back to showing off the Trump family so they can all improve the brand? I mean sometimes you get the impression that he is really all about the brand and not about politics. Hossain: I wonder where we get that impression that Trump is all about himself. I would not be surprised. He backtracks on everything and he has not spent any money on TV ads the way Clinton has. His war chest is smaller. He relies on a lot of this free publicity. Gunlock: I think he is about the brand, absolutely. And he is unpredictable. Everything he says is baffling both to the press and voters. You cannot track this guy. So I do think that he is always got business and always got his own interests and he s always got his family first in mind. The Trump kids picked governor Pence.

Hossain: And they got rid of Carrie Lodanksey or whatever his name is, so they have been lobbying for their dad. Erbe: Okay, and the terrorist attack in France; how is that going to affect the race? Norton: It will affect it again, these are short-term issues. And one thing the Democrats ought to hope for you do not have one of these attacks before the election, cause that could swing you points one way or the other. So although terrorism is not in control of any candidate of either party, Trump benefits from being a Republican. Here is where talking tough matters. She has the credentials and here s where we are lucky. Normally we would not have a candidate with credentials like being Secretary of State during a time of terrorism and having something other than the traditional Democratic view on war and peace. So that will help us and when she gets to talking about it, I think people will listen. Hossain: Hillary was in a situation room doing the raid on Bin Laden, so she doesn t just have random expertise. I think she should talk about that. Shah Bharara: And Benghazi overshadows that. It's huge. Gunlock: You can say she was in the situation room, but many people blame her for the situation we are in and the increase in terrorist acts. I think her experience at the State Department does her no good. I do not think it helps her. To the average voter, people see her as a failure as a secretary of state and she will continue to fail as a president. Hossain: Well I think that those people need to go back and check their history and find out how we got to destabilizing the Middle East. It wasn t because of Hillary Clinton. Gunlock: If we are going to blame George W. Bush, at least you should say she contributed to the worsening of the situation. They did not improve the situation. Hossain: I don t think that you should have to say that. Erbe: Even Trump blamed George W. Bush, let's make that point. With the possibility of Hillary Clinton becoming our first female president much has been made about the role of femininity in how Americans view candidates. Erbe: But what about the role of masculinity? Analysts say her opponent Donald Trump has made his toughness and manliness a central part of his appeal. Jackson Katz: In this campaign and every other campaign in the modern era, it's really been about masculinity and manhood. The president is the head of the first family, again, commander in chief. He is the literal representative of the country on the international stage. And for a country that sees itself in the way the United States sees it, going back to George Washington, every president has been, in a certain sense, the archetypal man who is the embodiment of the country. And for a woman to ascend to that space and occupy that cultural terrain means that she is going to disrupt the symbolic architecture of a certain key part of men's dominance. And that is one of the reasons why it is an uphill fight for women. Erbe: The electorate has been split in A similar fashion. Clinton leads trump by a massive margin among women according to a recent Pew poll. Trump led among men. It could be the largest gender gap ever recorded.

Katz: Donald Trump -- his misogyny is so explicit that it's not just his policy positions, like opposing women's rights to reproductive freedom. It's not just his policy positions. It s his persona and the aggressive way he dismissed women and reduced women to sexual objects...i think, you know, sentient women can see that the man clearly has deep misogyny as well as his other narcissistic personality traits. But so it doesn't surprise me that women would be put off by that on a personal level. That is irrespective of his political belief system. Erbe: So Congresswoman Norton, look at Britain, second conservative female party leader that has been elected there. And Hillary Clinton is -- as you mentioned earlier, she is to the right of a lot of Democrats, that is what the problem was with Bernie Sanders supporters. Is she tough enough to overcome femininity as an issue? Norton: A word of caution. This is the most machismo candidate in memory, and this is the most machismo country ever. This was the country that was settled by the notion of manhood and guns and all of that is still in our DNA. This is not Great Britain where guns are virtually outlawed. This is not the German Republic both of which have female prime ministers. We have not got to assume as far as we have come as feminists that men are really ready to raise their hands and say I want a woman to be president of the United States. She is going to have to work very hard for it. Shah Bharara: I cannot believe I'm saying this but I agree with you wholeheartedly on that one. It's tremendous right. We look at great Britain, and we see what s happened there, but I want to shed light what happened there just recently with with Andrea Leadstrom who dropped out of the race and Theresa May, now prime minister. She does not have children. Andrea Leadstrom came out saying Look she does not have children. I would be better because I have children I have a vested future here, I have more at stake. And it s like, why are we coming down on women for having kids and not having kids? Maybe there's something behind that. Maybe not having kids says no, I have more time for the job. I will be a leader. Because I will put everything into this. Erbe: What about having one kid? The closest compromise you can make. Shah Bharara: Sure. But not having kids makes people think that you are freed up and you have a time, just like a man to throw everything into it. That is macho, too, there are women out there who don t have children that are seemed to be very independent, fierce, strong- minded. Why is that always the case? Why are we always judging women like that? I think we've turned politics on its head in terms of the global stage because we ask the questions and there is no good answer. Hossain: What would Hillary have to do to fit into the outdated concept of femininity? Bake cookies on the side? She could never win. Erbe: Baking cookies is not exactly what you need to do to win president. It s one thing to be the First Lady-- Hossain: But when people ask about her femininity. What do they expect? They want an apron but Madame President as well? I think we need to stop trying to fit her into the box. The times are changing and she will be changing the narrative. Gunlock: I do not think the American voter is as concerned about the fact she a woman. I think what the American voter wants is leadership. And I think her e-mail scandal has really been a hit to her. I think It makes her look feeble and weak, and like she didn t know what was going on. That is the problem here. It's not that she is a woman and she is feminine and that she doesn't sort of match Trump's machismo. It is a leadership question and like it or not, I think people like that Trump has --

Erbe: But does the fact that she has the weaknesses, this baggage, as a candidate does that make it impossible to tease it out from whether she were a woman who did not have such baggage but were a democrat would be able to get elected president? Gunlock: I do not want to dismiss the fact she has added burden being a woman, and the first woman. She is a trail blazer trying to get to the highest office. But I think it's less of an issue than maybe we think it is. Erbe: And I'm just curious, why don't conservative women such as yourself, give her more credit in the sense that she is to the right of many Democrats and she is more hawkish no doubt about it. She went for the bombing on Libya, but that still doesn't matter as much as that she used a private e-mail server as did Colin Powell when he was secretary of state. Gunlock: Well look, we can drag out what Comey said it; was incredibly irresponsible. I know people that work in the intelligence community and they are horrified by what occurred. I do not think it is -- in fact it would be sexist to give her a pass on this. Look, she is going for the presidency. You do not get a pass on these things. This is national security and it's very important and we should take it seriously and treat her like we would treat a man in the same position Erbe: Wait a minute. Are you ok with that? Norton: About treating her the same as a man? Absolutely. I do not see in this discussion, the feminine part of it. I see the political part of it. Erbe: And your last word? Shah Bharara: Conservative women are split on Hillary. I have to tell you, there are women moderate Republicans saying I will go to Hillary. I was one of those women. Of course, I will not be in November but I have to say, conservative women are split because they know she is more right. However the other half says anyone but the Clintons. And that s what we re up against too. Erbe: All right. Let us know what you think. Follow me on Twitter @bonnieerbe or @tothecontrary. From masculinity and politics to gender and expectations. Erbe: Actress Jennifer Aniston may be best known for her tabloid coverage. But in a thoughtful and powerful statement to the public online this week, she called out gossip-ridden tabloid coverage of women as objectifying, scrutinizing, absurd and disturbing. She says tabloids portray women in ways that make little girls think they are not beautiful if they are not tall and skinny. She said by constantly trying to find out if she is pregnant, tabloids further the notion that women are not complete unless they are married with children. She wrote we are complete with or without a mate, with or without a child. We get to decide for ourselves what is beautiful when it comes to our bodies. That decision is ours and ours alone. Let's make that decision for ourselves and for the young women in this world who look to us as examples. Erbe: So, Anushay, since she is --not by her own making-- but the queen of tabloid coverage, at least for the last decade or so, will women listen to her and stop buying into this misogynist stuff? Hossain: I don t know if they ll listen to her, but they re definitely listening to her right now and I love she spoke up. I think the public has been waiting for Jennifer Aniston to be pregnant. She has been penalized about it. I mean, her divorce with Brad Pitt was so public. I actually think that if she doesn t want to have babies with Brad Pitt, this woman is not going to be having babies. But I love how she said--

Erbe: Isn't that sexist? Hossain: It is, it is. Erbe: Most people would think her current husband is attractive. Hossain: He is. He is. But I've never gotten over Brad Pitt. But she s right. We make our own destinies. And you know what, she is almost 50, and if she does not want to have kids, she is not going to be having them. Shah Bharara: I don't know where to come down on this whole thing except to say that Brad Pitt is a lucky guy to have an ex and a current wife who are very outspoken, and prolific, who really are just putting a good voice for all these issues. I mean, Angelina coming out and making the speech, and this piece from Jennifer Aniston, who we thought was this quiet, nice prairie gal. No, it's great. I think we should tip our hats to women like this. I want to see more commentary like this in society. Norton: Here is where the messenger counts. It's not coming from people who preach these issues all the time. And you are right. People will listen be cause they are not hearing it from-- Erbe: Will they listen to the point where they stop buying the stuff? All: No. No. Erbe: Which is to say that women who propagate the tabloids. Gunlock: And look, it might be a dark side of us that when we purchase these items. Look these -- there is an intense interest in celebrities. They have everything. They have staff, they have homes and go on vacations. And there might be a dark side that says look they have cellulite or oh they re getting divorced and oh they re not happy. There is a market for this, there is a demand. I'm not defending the tabloids, they are vile and say terrible things but they are simply fulfilling the demand. Shah Bharara: But suddenly the attenion was taken off the beautiful-beautiful and the words. And we look at Angelina and we look at Jennifer and they are beautiful. But the thing is, is that the words resonated with me-- [all talking at once] Erbe: the fact that She is tall, skinny and blond, which is what everybody is supposed to be including your child, who obviously is not going to be blond naturally. Shah Bharara: I think she is Ok. I hate to say that. I look and say she is all right. I like Angelina more but beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Erbe: That is my point. My question is: Will heavy set little girls, like I was, look and listen to her and not want to be -- not think that tall skinny and blond is the way to go anymore? Hossain: I hope so. What was different about what Aniston did this time is she wrote an op-ed in the Huffington Post with Arianna Huffington. It wasn t just a statement-- Norton: Condemn the tabloids as I do, they share that with the mainstream press. The same tall skinny white blond girls are featured in the regular press.

Gunlock: It s also not just women who are buying this stuff. Celebrities provide a lot of this information to the tabloids. We have heard cases of celebrities calling up paparazzi saying I will be here. They are the commodity. Erbe: And we heard about Donald trump doing it. When he wasn t a celebrity, though. When he was trying to become one. Gunlock: Of course. Celebrities there is a relationship between paparazzi and the tabloids and the stars. Erbe: That is it for this edition. Follow me on Twitter and visit our website, pbs.org/tothecontrary. And whether you agree or think to the contrary, see you next week. Announcer: For a transcript or to see an on-line version of this episode of to the contrary visit our website at pbs.org/tothecontrary. [ ] [END]