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There is nothing more that I’d love to do than stop talking about the 2016 Election.

But we will never get off this hellacious merry-go-round if Hillary Clinton’s army of detractors are always at the ready to tell her how bad and flawed and obviously wrong she is whenever she answers questions about her campaign. Which is why the debate continues anew, over and over again.

We urgently need your help to keep publishing! Every contribution we get from readers like you allows us to keep reporting and keeps our content free and accessible for everyone. Our reporting digs deep into the important policies, issues, and cultural trends that matter most in these unprecedented times. Join now to help fund this important work. Support Our Work I find this obsession with Clinton taking full responsibility for her loss from ostensibly “objective” observers really weird. — Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) May 2, 2017



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On Tuesday, Clinton chatted with Christiane Amanpour at a Women for Women International event in New York. She spoke on a number of topics, but what sparked the most attention was this candid remark: “If the election had been on October 27, I would be your president.” Before saying so, she took “absolute personal responsibility” for her loss and then cited data from FiveThirtyEight editor-in-chief Nate Silver that illustrated how FBI Director James Comey’s letter, together with Russia interference, likely pushed Trump over the finish line.

Clinton lost 4 states (FL, MI, WI, PA) by ~1 point. If not for Comey/Russia, she probably wins them all by ~2 points & strategy looks great. — Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) December 10, 2016

And like moths to a flame, the usual media types came out of the woodwork to chastise Clinton for her comments. New York Times White House correspondent Glenn Thrush snarked, “Mea Culpa—not so much.” CNN’s Chris Cillizza said, “Hillary Clinton made one thing VERY clear today: She thinks the election was taken from her.” And Maggie Haberman even “both sides’d” the matter of it all by tweeting, “Saying one thing and then saying the opposite. It’s what POTUS does too.”

Hillary can take responsibility for her loss. She can also note that she would have won if not for Comey/Russia. not mutually exclusive — Sam Stein (@samstein) May 2, 2017

You are all about @hillaryclinton being authentic until she says speaks her truth. — Jennifer Palmieri (@jmpalmieri) May 2, 2017

Much like the way society punishes women for the subversive act of seeking power—as Clinton saw with sinking poll numbers once she announced her presidential run—we also figuratively tar and feather women for having the audacity to lose. The more Clinton acknowledges her own accountability, the hungrier the media sharks are for blood. It is not enough to repeatedly cop to the strategical errors of her presidential bid, which—compared to FBI interference, Russia meddling, a “whitelash” on the heels of our first Black president, and a patriarchal system that has shut women out of executive power for more than two centuries—had arguably less of an impact on the end result than those extreme hurdles. No, Clinton has to beg for mercy at the altar of the church of public opinion. It is certainly no coincidence that the first female nominee for president was also the first to say “I’m sorry” after losing. That is the burden of being a member of at least one underrepresented group: Even in a system designed against you, nothing short of “I am solely to blame” will ever suffice.

Pundits: Hillary must take personal responsibility Hillary: I take personal responsibility Pundits: Nope, not good enough — Molly (@isteintraum) May 2, 2017

Hillary should just offer up a body part in tribute, and then maybe everyone can shut the fuck up. — Imani Gandy (@AngryBlackLady) May 2, 2017

Conservative columnist Jennifer Rubin pondered in the Washington Post: “I don’t know what psychic pleasure people get out of her public self-flagellation … it does seem a bit perverse to insist Clinton—who apparently apologized to Obama for the loss—continue to rend her garments in public every single time she shows up.” But there is nothing surprising about the societal tendency to shame women; it’s a tradition as old as time. From the Salem Witch Trials to repressive reproductive laws, patriarchal power structures will always aim to control our bodies—both physically and mentally—in order to keep women from encroaching upon male-dominated territories. The hunger to humiliate Clinton is especially strong because she is the only woman in America who has climbed so high up the political ladder. As writer Melissa McEwan noted, “There is no more damning evidence of the unfathomable scope of misogyny to which Hillary Clinton is subjected than the fact that the U.S. media’s favorite game is trying to destroy her.”

The media has more disdain for Hillary Clinton than a man who attacks journalists & threatens free press. It mystifies me. — Molly (@isteintraum) May 2, 2017

Part of why it is so easy for media members to pass the buck onto Clinton is because it feels more natural to turn blame inwards on women. Studies have shown that men’s failures are more often attributed to external factors, while women’s missteps are more likely to be branded as intrinsic shortcomings (conversely, when men succeed, we tend to cite their personal abilities; when women do, it is perceived as “luck”). It’s why when Al Gore and John Kerry fell short in their respective campaigns in 2000 and 2004, the overarching narratives around their losses revolved around “hanging chads” or “Swiftboating.” For Hillary? She should have just visited Wisconsin more (never mind that she would have still lost the presidency even if she had won that particular Rust Belt state).

I find it troubling that virtually no one can say what Trump’s campaign did well, but everyone can harp on Hillary’s mistakes. — GothamGirlBlue (@GothamGirlBlue) April 22, 2017

And there is certainly a self-preservation element to some in the political media’s insistence that Clinton should shoulder most or all of the blame for the election’s results: It offers the Fourth Estate an avenue toward absolution for their own role in the outcome. Just like it would be wrongheaded for Clinton to pinpoint her loss only on forces outside of her, it is disingenuous for members of the press corps to act as though their editorial decisions had little to no effect on the electorate. When there were five times as many Clinton email stories as Trump conflicts of interest pieces across three major outlets, when only 10 percent of coverage was dedicated to policy, and when the candidates were framed on falsely equivalent terms, something has broken. It is incredibly ironic that journalists who cast all kinds of critical stones on those in power feel as though they are above reproach.

Just watching the “Hillary has nobody to blame but herself” hit pieces roll in from journalists who spent all of 2016 writing about emails. pic.twitter.com/MgXUs1iC05 — The Resisterhood (@resisterhood) April 18, 2017

It’s been 6 months. Has a single NYT employee publicly said “Maybe we shouldn’t have devoted entire front page above fold to Comey letter”? — Jamison Foser (@jamisonfoser) May 2, 2017

And that is why it is so incredibly important to keep pushing back on the narrow-minded postmortems around the forces that culminated in November. We will never learn the most incisive lessons from this election if an overwhelmingly white and male news media is setting these stories. To put a finer point on it: A press that is not representative of the country it reports on will always be limited in scope and out of touch with the population at-large. We are seeing that so clearly in the Trump era.

And I’m pretty sure the reason is our predominantly white media doesn’t want to confront the truth on what Trump’s win says about America. — Jack Runyan (@JackDRunyan) May 3, 2017

A friend of mine recently described this neverending need to object to overarching media narratives as if we were “salmon fighting against the patriarchal current.”

And so we keep swimming.