That’s not exactly the title of Monica Hesse’s article in The Washington Post. The Post’s title is “Loving Elizabeth Warren Means Having a Plan For When America Breaks Your Heart”. I’m not ready for the “when” yet.
Quote:
Within three minutes of getting in line for an Elizabeth Warren rally, Iâve been handed a business card for a woman-empowerment organization called Brass Ovaries, and the founder, my linemate, has drawn me into a conversation about Warren that has begun to feel like the only conversation to have about Warren: the kind thatâs about hope, and despair, and how itâs possible to love America and also want to throw it out the window.
âI went to one of her events before and I gave her one of my Brass Ovaries pins,â Michelle Johnson says. âAnd I started to explain how itâs about fed-up women â but she said, âOh, I get it,â and I said, âI knew you would,â because Elizabeth always gets it, doesnât she?â
This is the first part of the Warren conversation. It involves dreaming of a version of the country where leaders are excellent at explaining certain things, like the current shortcomings of health care and child care; and where they donât need other things explained to them at all, like what it feels like to be an exasperated woman.
But Michelle, who plans to vote for Warren in her stateâs Tuesday primary, also finds herself having a second, more maddening part of the Warren conversation. When she told her mother that she thought Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) would be a good running mate, her mother blanched. âAmerica isnât ready for two women on the ticket,â she said, then added that America might not even be ready for one.
That part is about fear. Itâs about fearing a version of America that was certified as the real version four Novembers ago, when Hillary Clinton lost to D—- T—-. Or so people keep saying.
Itâs a conversation that isnât really about Elizabeth Warren at all; itâs about the rest of us.
There we were in New Hampshire, in the exhaust fumes of Iowaâs caucuses, which had been such a spectacular fiasco that Warrenâs supporters in Keene now believed it was up to them to sort things out and, ideally, to sort things out for Warren. For all the chaos in Des Moines, one thing was clear: Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg wrestling through a tie with a quarter of the votes apiece.
And Warren, who had topped polls in October, had finished a distant third.
This alone didnât faze her New Hampshire supporters. Sheâd outpaced the erstwhile front-runner Joe Biden, after all, who took his fourth-place finish as a âgut punch.â Plus, while Iowa was âa bunch of people running around in a gymnasium,â as one voter here put it, their stateâs election was a civilized primary, and was also in the Massachusetts senatorâs backyard.
But then a Boston Globe New Hampshire prediction came out. It had Warren polling at 13 percent in the Granite State. Behind Sanders. Behind a rising Buttigieg. In the loam with Biden.
Then Warrenâs campaign announced that it was pulling ad dollars in Nevada and South Carolina.
Then it was time to really think about Elizabeth Warren. Which really means sorting through what version of America you believe in â the one where we are ready to vote a woman into the Oval Office, or the one where we arenât â and whether itâs the believing, one way or another, that makes your version true.
âThe thing is, I can picture her up there on the debate stage with T—-, and sheâs debating him to pieces,â says Deb Wilson, a retired New Hampshire educator. âTo pieces.â
âWe need her,â says Wendy Keith, a social worker. âWe need her so badly. We need someone that strong and that smart.â
âI think having a woman in the White House â I think sheâll care for us,â adds Esther Scheidel, standing next to Wendy.
âOf course, Iâm not voting for her because sheâs a woman …â another supporter chimes in a few minutes later, having overheard the earlier conversation…âOf course, Iâm not voting for her because sheâs a woman; I donât even think of her as a woman,â another supporter chimes in a few minutes later, having overheard the earlier conversation…
Itâs a preposterous, relatable, vexing statement. Itâs impossible not to see Warren as a woman. Many of her policies were explicitly shaped by that identity, as she readily acknowledges. Is ânot thinking of Warren as a womanâ supposed to be a compliment?
What I think this man means is that ever since 2016, we have been trapped in a vague debate about electability, and whether itâs only men have who have it. In the fog of uncertainty over Hillary Clintonâs complicated defeat (she neglected Wisconsin, she used a private email server, she was a ânasty womanâ slain by weaponized misogyny, she still won the popular vote), the debate has mutated into an abstract panic about whether any woman can get elected in 2020.
Trying to ignore Elizabeth Warrenâs femaleness is an attempt to neatly sidestep the whole problem. To pretend that we have the capacity to vote entirely on merits. To behave as if each election can happen in a vacuum, uninformed by the elections and the hundreds of years of history that came before it.
Can you ignore that while Pete Buttigieg might be a millennial wunderkind, a female 38-year-old mayor of a midsize town would have a hard time being taken as seriously if she up and ran for president? Can you ignore that Bernie Sandersâs shouting is seen as righteous but if Kamala Harris ever raised her voice, it was seen as anger? How did Joe Biden automatically get to wear the cloak of electability for nearly a full year before Iowa tore it off?
…. These days, of course, people donât say, âI wonât vote for a womanâ; they say, âIâm scared my moderate father-in-law needs a man on the ballot to motivate him to the polls.â
This isnât progress. This is treating the election as a psychic reading.
âIâm leaning toward Warren,â says Frank Brownell, a retired editor who relocated to Keene from Upstate New York. âIâm not a big Buttigieg fan. But I want to pick someone to win.â He sighed, deeply troubled. âWomen have such a burden. I actually wish women ran the world.â
If he wished women ran things, I asked him, was there a reason he was still merely leaning toward Warren? Here was a woman he liked who was offering to run the country, and he literally had the chance to give her the job.
âIâm going to vote for her,â he decided, then waffled. âI donât know, I donât know.â
His qualms werenât with Warren. He loved Warren. His qualms were about everyone else, everyone else who might not be ready to vote for a woman. âIâm hopeful but Iâm not hopeful. I donât think America is what I always hoped it was.â
Here are some things that happen at Elizabeth Warren events: Warren sprints onstage, much tinier and slighter than she appears on television, to Dolly Parton singing â9 to 5.â She shares that she was her parentsâ late-in-life baby, and her mother never stopped referring to her as âthe surprise.â She talks about her first marriage, and then she jokes that itâs never good when you have to number your marriages. She tells a story about a toaster, and the toaster becomes a metaphor for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which she helped create, and the CFBP becomes a metaphor for how things can change, but only if you are willing to believe they can change.
You have to believe; thatâs the key. You have to jump into the void of possibility. Ready or not.
She is optimistic and upbeat, almost comically so, as if she is Elizabeth Warren playing SNLâs Kate McKinnon playing Elizabeth Warren. She is empathetic in a way that could feel phony if youâre not accustomed to that sort of thing in a politician.
At one event in New Hampshire, a little girl approaches the microphone, accompanied by her mother.
âMy name is Elizabeth,â she says.
âYour name is Elizabeth?â Warren reels back. âOh wow! Double Elizabeths! I feel the power.â
âIâm seven years old.â
Warren pauses, deadpan. âIâm .â.â. not.â
âI want to know if you will close the camps,â the 7-year-old Elizabeth asks.
Here, Warrenâs response grows impossibly soft and intimate, so soft that it feels almost indecent to listen to, like this has become a private conversation. The camps in Texas where they are holding children? Warren asks. The 7-year-old nods. Those camps.
âYes,â Warren says. âYes.â
And then people in the audience tear up because in that moment they did seem to believe things could change, that Warren was the best candidate, that others thought so too and just needed to be convinced that itâs safe to vote for her. That thereâs nothing to fear in nominating this woman but fear itself.
âIf everyone is trying to play that [electability] game,â offers Nancy Loschiavo, a Warren supporter, âthen what has our country come to?â
But, Loschiavo hastens to add, sheâll absolutely vote for whoever the nominee is.
Everyone at the Warren events hastens to add that.
A survey had come out a few days before, asking each candidateâs supporters whether, assuming their own first choice dropped out, they would vote for whoever was the Democratic nominee. Some supporters professed a my-guy-or-bust attitude… But Warrenâs supporters, more than anyone else, said theyâd vote for whomever they needed to vote for.
One way to read this is that Warren doesnât have crossover appeal: She appeals only to the folks who would have voted Democratic no matter what. Another way to read this is that her supporters are as practical as they are passionate: Thereâs an outcome theyâd prefer, but if it doesnât happen, theyâll move on to the next best thing. Theyâve got a plan for that.
After talking to enough of her fans, I think itâs the second explanation. The second explanation, mixed with something deeper:
Loving Elizabeth Warren means planning for America to break your heart.
It means watching her tweet out an optimistic message after Iowa, and then watching how all of the early replies instruct her to defer to Sanders and drop out…
It means listening to people complain about her schoolmarmishness and quietly wondering what was so wrong, exactly, with sounding like a schoolmarm. Whatâs so wrong with sounding like a grandmother? Whatâs so wrong with her animated hand gestures, her cardigans, her preparedness, her laugh, her husband, her brain, her work, her femaleness, her voice?
It means hoping things will break your way, but accepting that they probably wouldnât, because America never quite seems to work that way, does it?
America doesnât just render a verdict on the acceptability of women and their clothes and laughs every four years; America does that every day, in a lot of different ways. Thatâs the reason Michelle Johnson feels moved to make âbrass ovariesâ pins, and the reason Elizabeth Warren doesnât have to ask her to explain why.
âThe biggest reluctance I hear is âCan a woman win?âââ says Ron Jones, who … has been canvassing for Warren and had come to see her speak in a Nashua community college gym. âI point out that a woman has already won,â he said, referring to Clintonâs popular-vote victory.
âI tell them, look at other countries with successful female leaders,â says Harris. âI tell them, look at successful female CEOs.â … Or just look around you….
Inside the gym, attendees filled the folding plastic chairs, and when those were full, leaned against the walls, parkas draped over their forearms. Seatmates introduced themselves to each other and talked about why they liked Warren, and why there were still reasons to be hopeful, maybe.
âI just want someone to bring energy back,â M.K. Hayes tells the fellow New Hampshirites sitting next to her. âAnd with her, thereâs no cynicism, but thereâs urgency. With her, you can say, âIâm liberal and Iâm proud.âââ
Her husband likes Warren, too, but heâs not here today. He likes her, she explains, but he might not vote for her; heâs not sure itâs the practical thing to do.
âI am trying to get him to vote with his heart,â Hayes says. âI am trying to get him to have the courage to risk.â
The music in the gym gets a little louder. When â9 to 5â comes on, Warren sprints onstage. She talks about her family. She talks about her toaster. She says she is running a campaign from the heart, because she believes 2020 is âour moment.â
âI believe in that America,â Elizabeth Warren says, and then she tries to convince the audience that they believe in that America, too.
Unquote.