Analysis Based on factual reporting, although it incorporates the expertise of the author/producer and may offer interpretations and conclusions.
Democrats Embrace the Power of Nontoxic Masculinity
Women have been running for president of the United States , and for almost that long people have been asking what women need to do in order to break what Hillary Clinton has called the 鈥溾 left in American culture.
Almost no one has asked what men need to do in order to remedy the problem that the job has been off-limits to more than 50% of the talent pool since 鈥 forever.
At the 2024 Democratic National Convention, that changed. Democratic men made choices that were entirely new, or exceedingly rare, in support of a woman presidential candidate and in service to the nation. It was unprecedented.
As a , I鈥檝e argued that the biggest impediment to electing a woman as president is not a dearth of qualified woman candidates but a . The fault is not in the candidates but in American culture.
As it turns out, men in politics were also to blame.
When faced with competitive women as presidential candidates, many men historically have leveraged their power and privilege in ways that undercut women鈥檚 candidacies. But the Democratic convention was different.
For the first time in history, men in a major political party offered unified support for a woman candidate. They refrained from strategically deploying the stereotype that strong women are not likable, as .
They accepted the party鈥檚 overwhelming support for a woman candidate, instead of insisting on being , as Bernie Sanders did in 2016.
And they put their career on hold to support their spouse鈥檚 candidacy instead of undercutting it by offering support to primary campaign challengers, as Bob Dole did when .
鈥淩elinquishing Male Power鈥
Rhetorical choices reveal the underlying motivations of individuals and groups. The messaging of Democratic men at the 2024 convention signaled that their party was finally ready to do something that no major party has ever done. They were not only nominating a woman candidate but relinquishing male power and privilege.
Biden surprised everyone when he pulled out of the race from flagging poll results, skeptical donors and party leaders, and nervous down-ballot candidates. Any resentment he may have felt, however, did not turn into pique or pettiness at the convention.
When the crowd chanted, 鈥淭hank you, Joe,鈥 he instructed, 鈥,鈥 and promised to be 鈥渢he best volunteer the Harris and Walz camp have ever seen.鈥 He didn鈥檛 just give up his candidacy. He ceded his authority鈥攖o the people and the party, but also to Harris, specifically.
Although Secretary of Transportation and may still harbor his own presidential aspirations, he did not use his convention speaking slot to audition for the 2028 campaign. Instead, he performed the role that historically has been reserved for women at political conventions: pitching the party鈥檚 message via the perspective of a parent whose primary concern is 鈥, .
The convention speech given by the presidential nominee鈥檚 spouse has historically been an opportunity for prospective first ladies to portray their husbands as patriarchs of an ideal American family. In his speech, second gentleman Doug Emhoff of a 鈥渃omplicated鈥 and 鈥渂lended family鈥 with no patriarch but two active partners, equally capable of professional success and deep commitment to family.
When Harris selected Tim Walz as her running mate, and the who deemed Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro the best strategic choice. Walz鈥檚 by one news outlet as the message of a 鈥淢idwest 鈥榤an鈥檚 man鈥欌 and the 鈥渁ntidote to toxic MAGA masculinity.鈥 Even Ms. magazine touted it as a 鈥.鈥
But Walz did something Americans are not used to seeing 鈥渕an鈥檚 men鈥 do. He made it clear that he could work not just with, but for, a woman. And that everyone should.
After that the election was in the metaphorical 鈥渇ourth quarter,鈥 the team was 鈥渄own a field goal,鈥 and the offense was 鈥渄riving down the field,鈥 Coach Walz made it clear that, as in his high school coaching days, . Their leader was Kamala Harris, and 鈥淜amala Harris is tough. Kamala Harris is experienced. And Kamala Harris is ready.鈥
Contented Second Fiddles
To be clear, Harris鈥 early success as a presidential candidate should be attributed, first and foremost, to her to a series of unprecedented events and to the of the Black women who have long sustained the Democratic Party.
But the men of the convention made a collective choice to embrace 鈥,鈥 as an Axios reporter described it, and treat Harris like a commander in chief. That should be unremarkable. Women have been doing it for presidential candidates since 鈥 forever. But to see so many white men stepping back so enthusiastically for a woman of color was almost unbelievable.
Stepping back is not the same thing as stepping away. That鈥檚 important, because the broader message of the convention was about how to create an inclusive, democratic community. When you need to make a circle wider, and let more people in, you step back. That doesn鈥檛 leave you out of the circle. It makes your circle bigger.
The convention offered an expansive circle that includes , , and serve as , and .
It also includes a presidential candidate who looks like no other president in U.S. history. That鈥檚 a big step forward for the country.
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .
Karrin Vasby Anderson
is a professor of communication studies at Colorado State University, where she teaches courses in rhetoric, political communication, and gender and communication. She is a past editor of the Quarterly Journal of Speech, published by the National Communication Association. Her research examines the culture of politics and the politics of culture, with special emphasis on gender and the presidency and political pop culture. Her books include "Woman President: Confronting Postfeminist Political Culture (Texas A&M University Press, 2017) and Women, Feminism, and Pop Politics: From 鈥淏itch鈥 to 鈥淏adass鈥 and Beyond (Peter Lang, Inc., 2018).
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