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- <text id=91TT2389>
- <title>
- Oct. 28, 1991: Supreme Court:Woman Power
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- Men and Women:Sex, Lies & Politics
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 28, 1991 Ollie North:"Reagan Knew Everything"
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- SUPREME COURT
- Woman Power
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Outraged over the Thomas confirmation, women vow political
- revenge. But like civil rights leaders, they face rank-and-file
- divisions.
- </p>
- <p>By PRISCILLA PAINTON -- With reporting by Michael Duffy and Julie
- Johnson/Washington and Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> A few Americans have picked over the detritus of the
- Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill bonfire and found something they can
- use. The owners of Spytech, a firm that supplies pocketbook-size
- recorders, came up with a new ad campaign: "Sexually harassed?
- Prove it. Stop it. Sue." Jesse Jackson, the sloganeer of
- American politics, is now talking about "economic harassment."
- And law schools such as the University of Miami's are preparing
- courses on sexual harassment.
- </p>
- <p> But mostly what was discovered in the wreckage of the
- Supreme Court confirmation hearings was the charred skeletons
- of some American myths. When the 52-to-48 vote was over Tuesday
- night, confirming Clarence Thomas as a Supreme Court Justice by
- the lowest margin of this century, some Americans had to give
- up a few illusions about fair play and about the complicated
- dynamics of racial and sexual solidarity. They learned that a
- woman who comes forward in good faith to make an accusation can
- become the accused, that skin color matters more to blacks than
- ideology, and that gender matters less to women than the causes
- women espouse in the name of feminism.
- </p>
- <p> This last lesson is perhaps most startling to America's
- feminist groups. Two weeks ago, backed by angry calls and
- letters from women across the country, they demonstrated their
- clout by pressuring the Senate into investigating Anita Hill's
- story. When Hill walked into the Senate Caucus Room, women
- across America saw her as the bearer of an old secret about the
- ugly politics of accommodation between men and women on the job.
- But by the time Hill walked out of the hearings, a majority of
- women had decided she did not speak for them. On the eve of the
- vote, polls showed that 55% of men found Thomas more believable
- and that 49% of women agreed.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with this female skepticism, some feminists argue
- that Hill lost the ideological battle in part because she lost
- the tactical one. For one thing, she missed prime time. "Anita
- Hill spoke to 5 million Americans during the day. Thomas spoke
- to 30 million that night," says University of Southern
- California law professor Susan Estrich. More important, perhaps,
- Hill's putative Democratic allies on the Senate Judiciary
- Committee sat back as judges while the Republicans played the
- role of prosecutors, ultimately painting the Yale-educated law
- professor as a delusionary careerist with a split personality
- and a tendency to cull lawbooks for references to pornographic
- film stars. "The asymmetry was tough to watch," says a top
- strategist for the Democrats. "The Democrats have always been
- the defenders of women's issues, but when one of those issues
- was brought to center stage, they caved. Hill was savaged for
- three days by Republicans who played to win. No one
- cross-examined Thomas in the same tone."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, however, Hill lost her own female constituency
- not because of poor timing or poor friends in the Senate but
- because of an unspoken factor that has kept the women's movement
- from becoming a consistent force in American politics: class.
- In office after office last week, informal polls often turned
- up the same split: secretaries sided with Thomas while their
- male and female bosses took Hill's side. When J.C. Alvarez came
- forward as a witness for the judge and described Hill as aloof
- and ambitious, she played a real-life version of Tess, the
- secretary pitted against a Wall Street shrew in the movie
- Working Girl. Peggy Noonan, a former speechwriter for George
- Bush, calls it a division "between clever people who talk loudly
- in restaurants and those who seat them." However they are
- described, the two groups are separated by privilege. "Both
- working-class women and highly educated women put up with sexual
- harassment every day," says Anne Reingold, media director for
- the Democratic Party. "But the perception among working-class
- women is that a Yale degree just gives you the right to make a
- federal case out of it. Besides, if you can't get a good-paying
- job somewhere else, what good is that degree anyway?"
- </p>
- <p> Instead of dwelling on last week's setback, women around
- the country lashed out at the Senate's 98 male members and
- threatened to target those who put Thomas on the high court.
- They jammed the phone lines at the Democratic Party. They staged
- demonstrations aimed at both Democrats and Republicans, from
- Washington to San Francisco. They joined or donated money to
- women's groups and generally vented their outrage. "We will no
- longer beg for our rights from men in power. We will replace
- them and take power ourselves," Patricia Ireland, executive vice
- president of the National Organization for Women, told the
- Washington Post. Said Eleanor Smeal, president of the Fund for
- the Feminist Majority: "The Senate did more in one week to
- underscore the critical need for more women in the Senate than
- feminists have been able to do in 25 years."
- </p>
- <p> There was predictable talk about forming a third political
- party dedicated to women's causes. The Democratic Senatorial
- Campaign Committee -- headed by Virginia Senator Charles Robb,
- who cast his vote for Thomas -- took a double hit. Its annual
- fund raiser in Washington was picketed by feminists, and the
- liberal direct-mail firm of Craver, Matthews, Smith announced
- it was dropping the group as a client. Some of the party's most
- loyal contributors, including MCA chairman Lew Wasserman and
- Democratic doyenne Pamela Harriman, put the party on notice that
- they would not raise a dime for the 11 Democratic Senators who
- gave Thomas his slim victory.
- </p>
- <p> But even as they threatened retaliation, women's groups
- were forced to confront the volatility and fragmentation of
- their movement. "We can talk about our anger, but are we angry
- enough to do the hard things, to be single-minded and do the
- things that need to be done to play to win?" asked Emily Tynes,
- a Washington consultant to liberal groups. And what does playing
- to win mean? Does it mean targeting Pennsylvania Senator Arlen
- Specter, who voted for Thomas but is pro-choice?
- </p>
- <p> Since its peak two decades ago, the women's movement has
- spawned subgroups whose diverse interests range from pushing day
- care to combating pornography. In some ways, feminist politics
- have expanded too much to keep women under one tent. In the
- Thomas-Hill aftermath, feminists took their energy in different
- directions: Geraldine Jensen, who heads a Toledo-based
- organization that seeks to strengthen child-support laws, says
- she plans to use the recent performance of the Senate Judiciary
- Committee to illustrate to her supporters why tough enforcement
- legislation has failed. "Now people will understand me when I
- say that these are the ones making the decisions," she says.
- </p>
- <p> While such lessons may be inspiring, they are not likely
- to sweep a large number of women into office. Women's groups
- christened 1990 the Political Year of the Woman, but only one
- of the seven women who ran for the Senate last year, Nancy
- Kassebaum of Kansas, was elected; she voted for Thomas last
- week. In Congress pro-choice activists have helped pass a bill
- to overturn the gag rule that now forbids doctors to discuss
- abortion at federally funded clinics, but they cannot muster
- enough votes to override Bush's veto. Next week the Senate will
- take up Senator John Danforth's civil rights bill, which for the
- first time would award compensatory damages to victims of sexual
- harassment. But even after the recent outpouring of testimony
- about the problem, congressional lobbyists are not sure the
- Senate will produce the votes to override a presidential veto.
- When a similar bill came before Governor Pete Wilson in
- California last week, he killed it.
- </p>
- <p> Though Bush has consistently frustrated the feminists,
- anyone hoping to defeat him on women's issues in 1992 may have
- an uphill battle. The gender gap, which is the difference in
- support between men and women, for a President yawned as wide
- as 14% in the 1988 campaign. It has now shrunk to only 5%.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, many women are hoping that their movement will
- get a strong boost next year if the Supreme Court decides to
- overturn or restrict the abortion rights granted by the 1973 Roe
- v. Wade decision. Major decisions are often handed down in late
- June or early July, at the end of the court's annual session.
- An antiabortion ruling then would give speakers at the
- Democrats' July convention the ammunition to denounce the work
- of G.O.P.-appointed Justices. Republicans have reato worry: the
- issue divides their party and has already cost them the
- governorships of Virginia, New Jersey and Texas, as well as a
- congressional seat in a special election in Massachusetts this
- year. Says Massachusetts pollster Gerry Chervinsky: "People may
- not think sexual harassment is a voting issue, but they will
- vote on abortion."
- </p>
- <p> If feminist leaders have important lessons to learn from
- the Thomas hearings, so do the nation's civil rights advocates.
- By branding his ordeal a "high-tech lynching," Thomas turned his
- near lost battle into a referendum about skin color. His support
- among blacks moved from the mid-50% range to 71% on the eve of
- the vote. Until then, Democrats had countered Bush's masterly
- selection of a black conservative by calculating that Southern
- Senators, who were elected with thin white support and a strong
- black turnout, would not be penalized by whites for voting
- against a black man -- or by blacks for rejecting a
- conservative. But with the appearance of Hill, race won out over
- gender. "The Southern Senators are concerned about their black
- base," says Ronald Walters, a Howard University political
- scientist. "They got it right. The civil rights leaders got it
- wrong."
- </p>
- <p> That is the same gap that Republicans have attempted to
- exploit in their three-year-old, off-and-on effort to wrest at
- least 20% of the black vote from the Democrats. Bush made his
- contribution last week. "I don't believe that the civil rights
- leaders all speak for the American people on a matter of this
- nature," he said. That challenge to a traditional Democratic
- constituency comes at a time when blacks are expressing growing
- disenchantment with the party -- not by joining the ranks of
- Republicans but simply by not supporting Democrats. In 1988
- black-voter turnout was down 5% overall and 20% in major
- metropolitan areas such as Philadelphia, New York and Chicago.
- This sense of alienation persisted in 1990, when black
- dissatisfaction with Democrat Neil Hartigan in Illinois
- virtually elected Republican Jim Edgar as Governor. Last year
- the Joint Center for Political Studies, a policy center focused
- on black politics, found that the number of blacks identifying
- themselves as Democratic had decreased.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the Republicans may not be able to take advantage
- of black disappointment in the Democrats any more than
- feminists can exploit the anger that some women feel over the
- Senate's distrust of Hill. For what last week made clear is that
- in the politics of sex and race, the rules are always changing.
- </p>
- <p>THE THOMAS AGENDA
- </p>
- <p> Among key issues that Clarence Thomas will have to grapple
- with on the high bench:
- </p>
- <p> -- CHURCH AND STATE: In Lee v. Weisman, the court will be
- asked to decide whether public school authorities violate the
- Establishment Clause when they allow a commencement speaker to
- mention God in an invocation. Agrument: Nov. 6.
- </p>
- <p> -- PORNOGRAPHY: In Jacobson v. the U.S., the court will have
- to rule whether government agents had a right to launch a child-
- pornography sting operation. Postal inspectiors obtained
- Jacobson's name from an adult bookstore's mailing list, then
- targeted him with X-rated catalogs and arrested him after he
- ordered a kid-porn magazine. Jacobson is pleading that he was
- entrapped. Agrument: Nov. 6.
- </p>
- <p> -- CIVIL RIGHTS: In Ayers v. Mabus, the court will have to
- determine whether Mississippi has dismantled its "dual" higher-
- education system. Enrollment at formerly white and black
- campuses continues to follow a pattern of de facto segregation.
- Agrument: Nov. 13.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-