Hillary Clinton Takes Her Pantsuits to the Rust Belt As Trump Has Momentum

Her Shot: Hillary Clinton Shares a Vision of America Out of Hamilton New York Times

A Glass Ceiling Now Broken, Is US Ready for a Madam President New York Times

The World Economic Forum, in its latest Global Gender Gap report, ranked the United States 72nd of 145 countries for political empowerment, trailing countries like Cuba, Cape Verde and Kenya.

In part, experts say, the American system is at fault. The presidential nominating process, with its long and ruinously expensive campaigns, is tougher on nonconventional candidates than the parliamentary system is in many countries. And American politicians are averse to the quotas that helped increase female participation in other countries.

Badges and T-shirts deriding Mrs. Clinton in obscene terms or using sexual slurs became common at Trump and Sanders rallies. But women who have succeeded in Washington also point to deeply ingrained male chauvinism as a powerful impediment to success.

Madeleine Albright, America's first female secretary of state, recalled in an interview how she had often encountered more resistance from American colleagues than from the Arab heads of state she had been warned about. Hillary Clinton was shocked at the low priority of women's issues when she became secretary of state in 2008. She immediately opened an Office of Global Issues, headed by Melanne Verveer, who now heads the Georgetown Institute for Women.

“It was the little things,” Albright explained. Like when she raised her voice in meetings, “men would say, ‘Don’t be so emotional,’ or would drum their fingers on the table and say I was talking too long — when the men actually talked much longer.”

Similar attitudes endure today, powerful women say.

Hillary on the March by Gail Collins New York Times

Gail Collins nails it, capturing this historic moment (part one) as Hillary Clinton seizes America's brass ring at tonight's Democratic convention. We all know that inspiring oratory is not her strongest skill. Perhaps she can speak an action plan, punctuated with audio snippets from all the inspiring speakers who have endorsed her this week.

Collins taps into a rarely discussed undercurrent of identity politics in America, a strong moral belief among women that we will be fairer, more effective, and stronger leaders than so many male politicos who have held exclusive power in America. At the least, we are equally effective.

Those of us who support Hillary Clinton are counting on her to break through THIS glass ceiling -- that men are our moral leaders, a belief fundamental in the bedrock of most religious institutions in America. Countless women have rejected this fundamental tenet of American life for several decades. While many incredible women have lead this renouncing of America's male dominance for decades, Hillary Clinton carries this mantle on this day.

On this day, HWN would like to honor one of those unspoken names in American history: Sarah Grimke and her sister Angelina. ~ Anne

As Gail Collins notes:

"I’d like to think that somewhere, all the women who worked for this moment through American history are watching and nodding happily. Like the sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke, who really don’t get enough mention. They were the daughters of a wealthy pre-Civil War South Carolina slave owner who figured out on their own, when they were hardly more than babies, that the system was wrong. (When Sarah was about 4 she went to the docks and asked a sea captain to take her to a place where whipping was prohibited.)"

A Few Simple Truths About Immigration New York Times Editorial Board

Donald Trump and his allies at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland peddled two falsehoods about America’s immigration problem. One was the vision presented by speaker after speaker of a nation overrun with foreigners crossing American borders and infiltrating communities to rob and kill. Another was the notion that most Americans are desperate for the kind of tough-guy response — including massive deportation and building a wall — that Mr. Trump offers as his solution.

Ghazala Khan: Trump criticized my silence. He knows nothing about true sacrifice Washington Post

Donald Trump has asked why I did not speak at the Democratic convention. He said he would like to hear from me. Here is my answer to Donald Trump: Because without saying a thing, all the world, all America, felt my pain. I am a Gold Star mother. Whoever saw me felt me in their heart.
Donald Trump said I had nothing to say. I do. My son Humayun Khan, an Army captain, died 12 years ago in Iraq. He loved America, where we moved when he was 2 years old. He had volunteered to help his country, signing up for the ROTC at the University of Virginia. This was before the attack of Sept. 11, 2001. He didn’t have to do this, but he wanted to.

Poll: Clinton Rides Convention Bump Past Trump Morning Consult

We'll watch what happens in the coming week, but this Morning Consult poll has Hillary leading Trump for the first time among men. Last week Trump beat her by 8 pts among men. Today she led by 1 pt.

Hillary Clinton is once again leading Donald Trump in the presidential race after her party’s Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.

The former secretary of State leads the Republican, 43 percent to 40 percent, in a new Morning Consult survey taken in the days following the DNC gathering. It’s a 7-point swing from the previous poll, in which Trump surged to a 4-point lead following the Republican National Committee’s convention in Cleveland.

Almost one in five voters (17 percent) remain undecided.

Hillary Clinton Headlines July 31, 2016

John Allen predicts 'civil military crisis' if Trump is elected Politico

Mark Cuban Comes Off The Bench for Hillary The Daily Beast

Sanders vows to 'campaign vigorously' for Clinton Politico

Khizr Khan calls Trump's statement on fallen son 'disingenuous' Politico

Republican Hillary Hate Takes Misogyny To New Levels In Christie Prosecution

From Links to Lucifer to Calls for Execution, Republicans Seethe at Hillary Clinton New York Times

There have been aerial signs reading “Hillary for Prison,” rallying cries of “lock her up,” misogynistic souvenir swag mocking her body parts and, in a violent turn, a public call for Hillary Clinton to be executed.
Political conventions are usually a mix of talking up the party’s nominee and denouncing the opponent. But as Republicans gather in Cleveland to nominate Donald J. Trump, the venom being directed at Mrs. Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee, has taken a strikingly sinister tone that makes the days of Swift-boating and Bush-bashing at past conventions seem tame.
Here are some of the harshest attacks leveled at Mrs. Clinton this week.

Christie Conducts Mock Persecution of Clinton

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie conducted a mock trial of Hillary Clinton in his speech before the RNC on Tuesday, one so ruthless that it sent chills down my spine and reminded me why so many women have an aversion to American politics.

Hillary got a considerably warmer reception from her executioner in February when the two appeared on CNN and met behind the scenes. In the footage, Christie leaves so space in his Hillary hug, wishes her luck in the primary and even suggests Clinton should also get her own flavor of Ben & Jerry's ice cream. Unfortunately, the Vermont-original brand was committed to Sen. Bernie Sanders had.

To understand that just five months later would stand on a Cleveland stage, leading the audience in a chant of "Lock Her Up" made me think of the Salem Witch Trials. ~ Anne

"Lock Her Up!" The bloodlust in Chris Christie's speech against Hillary Clinton is not normal. It's sick. by Michelle Goldberg Slate

Christie’s speech was logically incoherent. Even if you buy his damning interpretation of Clinton’s foreign policy errors, it doesn't make sense to discuss them as matters of criminal malfeasance. Emotionally, though, that’s  in keeping with how Clinton’s bitterest foes talk about her: as a person of absolute corruption, who, through some sort of occult trick, moves through the world with intolerable impunity. As many people pointed out on Twitter, the way that Christie punctuated his inquisitorial brief with the crowd’s cries of “Guilty! Guilty! Guilty!” made him sound less like a contemporary politician than a magistrate condemning a witch.
Hating Hillary is the great theme of this gathering. T-shirts and buttons for sale around the convention revel in it: “Hillary for Prison,” “Life’s a Bitch—Don’t Vote For One,” “I Don’t Often Hate, but When I Do… I Prefer To Hate Hillary Clinton.” It’s the one thing that binds together the GOP now that its nominee has blithely jettisoned many of the party’s central principles. It is also, in its dehumanizing fervor, inescapably intertwined with misogyny. It’s not that Republicans don’t hate men—they obviously despise Barack Obama. But their loathing of Clinton is even more primal. They want to see her not just beaten but destroyed and humiliated, dressed in an orange jumpsuit and locked away.

Hillary Clinton Headlines July 20, 2016

Republicans rip Trump over NATO plan Politico

Ted Cruz just humiliated Trump by refusing to endorse him during convention speech VOX

In break with nonpartisan past, Hispanic business group endorses Clinton Washington Post

Melania Trump's Speechwriter Takes Responsibility for Lifted Remarks New York Times

Hillary Clinton has a 76 Percent Chance to Win the Presidency New York Times

Hillary Clinton Is Said to Seek National Security Experience for Vice Presidential Pick New York Times

Philadelphians Will Eat Hillary Clinton Leftovers Thanks to a DNC Food Waste App Mic.com

Clinton fundraising email rips Steve King: 'This is literally white supremacy' Politico

The Trump campaign is now blaming Hillary Clinton for Melania's Plagarism Scandal Vox

The Trouble With Hillary Clinton's Free Tuition Plan New York Times

Melania Trump's RNC bio incorrectly says she graduated from college CBS News

Priebus: I Would Likely Fire A Speechwriter Who Plagarized Politico

The Most Extreme Republican Platform in Memory New York Times