Vivien Goldman has a particular fascination with the rise of Donald Trump in this year’s presidential election – a fascination mixed with both a kind of respect and revulsion.
The New York City bohemian – a playwright, musician, and part-time “punk professor” residing in Queens, whose latest play is called “Cherchez la Femme” (“Look for the Woman”) – admits that she’s intrigued by the women in Mr. Trump’s life.
“They all seem such strong, competent women,” she says. “So you know, you just wonder: What is the deal at home? How do they handle it at dinner, because he’s so nakedly offensive.”
“It’s almost – well, you can’t say endearing, that would be going too far – but he’s so honest, so in your face with it, and he says what a lot of men veil. Yet, you can’t believe that he can carry on like that, and that anyone would take him seriously for getting into the White House.”
By now, it is abundantly clear that a great many people are taking Trump seriously. But it is also possible that one of the primary impediments on his path to the White House could be women voters.
Nearly 7 in 10, including nearly half of Republican women, view the real estate mogul unfavorably, according to a Gallup survey last month. That’s up from last July and a potential show-stopper come November.
That puts Trump and women voters uniquely in the political spotlight.
The paradox of the man – someone who has at once promoted women within his own company while also publicly demeaning women – open the candidate to a broad array of interpretations for those inclined to support or denounce him.
But his crude behavior and the appearance of objectifying women in some ways makes this election a referendum on how American society views acceptable treatment of women.
“The general election will be a moment where women’s opinions and issues are front and center in a way they never have been before,” says Christine Kelleher Palus, professor of public administration and dean of graduate studies at Villanova University in Philadelphia, in an e-mail. “The nature of the exchanges between the candidates will reinvigorate conversations about feminism and how we perceive women leaders in today’s complex and ever-changing world.”
'A TYPICAL NEW YORK CITY GUY'
Part of this is simply because of the candidate’s differences in both policy positions and personal style, which are stark to the point of being cliché.
There’s Trump, popular with working class men with his bravado and swagger, not to mention his real estate billions, private jets, and beautiful women at his side – part of his aura of success.
Then there’s Hillary Clinton, a feminist icon, policy wonk, and one of the most accomplished stateswomen of her or any generation, but who carries the weight of being the ultimate insider.
To Lara Wechsler, a court stenographer for the New York City court system, Trump just seems like “a typical New York City guy,” noting the brash, hyperbolic, off-the-cuff conversational style she often encounters with men. “All the stuff he says about women, he just seems to just get away with it.”
But though she rolls her eyes about Trump, she isn’t planning on voting for Mrs. Clinton, and she has only a modest interest in seeing the first woman president. An ardent supporter of Bernie Sanders, she says she’s likely to cast an antiestablishment vote for Jill Stein of the Green Party.
That old-school male bravado appeals to a significant number of voters, too.
“Trump can just say, ‘Yeah, I’m a playboy. And?’ There’s no real follow up to that,” says Christina Greer, a political scientist at Fordham University in New York. “You take people who see him as a masculine icon, and a role model in some ways.”
“But that is always where we’ve always been,” Professor Greer continues. “We’ve always loved the John Wayne image, this hyper-masculine narrative that we’ve always had in the United States…. Trump is facing a gender gap with a lot of women because of this – but not all women.”
ONE STORY, TWO REACTIONS
Last week, The New York Times published a story in which a number of women recounted humiliating encounters with Trump. Its opening anecdote featured Rowanne Brewer Lane, a model, then in her 20s, who met the billionaire for the first time during a 1990 pool party. At the party and without a swimsuit, she was offered a bikini by Trump, who then introduced her as “a stunning Trump girl.” The pair also went on to date for a time, during Trump’s first divorce.

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