A Quiet Moment
Last night, at the Murphy election night party at Lake Monster, it had gotten late and Patrick and Beatrix decided they had better leave.
And they were leaving just as Erin Murphy and Erin Maye Quade were arriving. Patrick gave them hugs and told them to keep their chins up. And then Beatrix gave Erin Murphy a big hug — and Erin leaned over and looked her straight in the eye and said "I BELIEVE in you." And it was quiet for minute at the edge of the parking lot and then the chants of "Erin, Erin!" started and they walked on to the event and Patrick and Beatrix went home and I stayed and cried.
Look, I'll rally and support Walz. He's not a bad guy. Compared to Johnson, he's basically a super-hero. But hear me out...
Last night, people once again said that it was fine to have a woman in the senate or as a representative. But when it came down to electing a woman as their actual leader, that they just couldn't do it. I heard so many people say that they more strongly believed in Erin, but they voted Walz because he was "more electable." And I want you to just sit with that a minute and tell me what you think that phrase means.
Because I believe in Beatrix too. And Erin Murphy. And me. And a lot of other women. And I'm not so sure right now that you do.
And they were leaving just as Erin Murphy and Erin Maye Quade were arriving. Patrick gave them hugs and told them to keep their chins up. And then Beatrix gave Erin Murphy a big hug — and Erin leaned over and looked her straight in the eye and said "I BELIEVE in you." And it was quiet for minute at the edge of the parking lot and then the chants of "Erin, Erin!" started and they walked on to the event and Patrick and Beatrix went home and I stayed and cried.
Look, I'll rally and support Walz. He's not a bad guy. Compared to Johnson, he's basically a super-hero. But hear me out...
Last night, people once again said that it was fine to have a woman in the senate or as a representative. But when it came down to electing a woman as their actual leader, that they just couldn't do it. I heard so many people say that they more strongly believed in Erin, but they voted Walz because he was "more electable." And I want you to just sit with that a minute and tell me what you think that phrase means.
Because I believe in Beatrix too. And Erin Murphy. And me. And a lot of other women. And I'm not so sure right now that you do.
Comments
Many, many on Facebook posts point to the fact that the Erin-Erin ticket was entirely urban (as in, no "out-state" candidate). I saw one person form the convention say it felt like a "big middle finger" to outstate MN when Murphy chose Quade as running mate. If Erin Murphy and team had considered that aspect it would have been an entirely different dynamic. Now Walz-Flanagan meets both the in-Twin-Cities/Out-state match, while both have teaching in their pasts - seem a perfect pair to me. Gender cannot be the 'single-issue' we vote on, while ignoring many others. That's how #45 got in, I believe. I think the south votes Anti-Choice ("pro-life" they call it, but we know *that's* a joke) Out-state people get gypped all the time (I live in STP, BTW). It's a basic truth that the DFL cannot afford to ignore.