
Carly Fiorina at Fox
Business Network’s Republican presidential debate Thursday in North Charleston,
Carly Fiorina has
dwindled to near- irrelevance in the Republican primary field, as illustrated
by her demotion to the undercard debate. But Fiorina, piping up from the kiddie
table Thursday, said something so calculatedly outrageous that it demands
response: “Unlike another woman in this race, I actually love spending time
with my husband.”
This reference to
Hillary Clinton was no gaffe. It was in Fiorina’s opening statement, in
response to a question about the economy. In a campaign that has, so far, been
blessedly free of sexism toward the Democratic front-runner, this was the most
retro, sexist remark yet, at least where Clinton is concerned
I wrote recently that
it was fair game for Donald Trump to raise the subject of Bill Clinton’s
conduct toward women, when Hillary Clinton had both dispatched her husband as
surrogate in chief and attacked Trump’s undisputed “penchant for sexism.”
Any campaign
surrogate’s past remarks and behavior are fair game — a former president’s
surely are , especially when they stand in contradiction to the candidate’s
message. Bill Clinton’s philandering is between him and his wife, not a
legitimate topic for campaign commentary. His inappropriate, arguably even
predatory, behavior toward women is.
That distinction
explains and underscores why Fiorina’s comment was so out of line. What does
she know of the Clintons’ marriage? What does anyone know about another
person’s marriage? Fiorina says she loves spending time with her husband, and
great for her, but she has no clue — none — about whether Hillary Clinton loves
spending time with hers.
For what it’s worth, I
believe Clinton deeply loves her husband, which explains her decision to stay
with him — a choice that conservatives should applaud, not disdain. But I also
believe that how they feel about one another, and how much time they spend
together, is none of our business. Just like Trump’s multiple marriages.
In post-debate
television appearances, Fiorina flailed around in the muck when called on to
justify her remark.
Why hadn’t she
questioned the state of other candidates’ marriages, asked Chris Matthews on
MSNBC’s “Hardball.” Fiorina: “There’s only two women running for president. I’m
one, and Mrs. Clinton is the other.” Um, but other candidates are married,
aren’t they? Only the wives are relevant?
Fiorina: “Well, I guess
I would say, you know, if my husband had done some of the things Bill Clinton
had done, I would have left him long ago.”
Fiorina: “Oh, I think
if you’re running for the presidency of the United States, everything’s an
issue. . . . If you’re going to lead, people have to trust you, and in order to
trust you, they have to know you. So, yes, I think it’s all fair game.”
Whoa. It’s one thing
for a voter to decide for herself whether to think well or ill of Clinton for
staying in her marriage. It’s quite another for a rival candidate to deploy
that decision — or in Fiorina’s case, to make smarmy insinuations about the
state of the Clinton marriage — against her.
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