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Kids and politics: A learning experience

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Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama

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John McCain

A presidential race is always interesting, and it offers a great chance to teach kids about American democracy, our electoral process and the issues that face our nation. To me, this is an opportunity to invite kids into adult conversations about where our country is headed.

And sometimes we learn something, too.

Back in the fall, I had started getting questions from my three daughters about the presidential race as it began to heat up. So one weekend afternoon I sat them down and started to explain how a presidential election works and who the candidates were. Eventually, I went through the candidates one-by-one, explaining where they were from and what their issues were.

When I got to Hillary Clinton, my oldest daughter — age 9 — stopped me in the middle of my verbal profile with a question: “Has a woman ever been president?” When I told her no, she stated emphatically, “Then I’m for Hillary. It’s time for a woman to be president.”

Frankly, I thought she was being a bit rash making her mind up that way and that quickly. I suggested she might want to learn more about Clinton and what she believes in first. But she was sold and before long, she had brought along her two younger sisters.

I didn’t worry too much about this at first. In fact, I wasn’t much older when volunteered on John Anderson’s campaign for president as a boy. I was naive, idealistic and didn’t understand the bigger picture issues of that race, but I still learned a lot from the experience of rooting for a candidate for president.

As the primary process went along and the race against Barack Obama grew more heated, my daughter became more virulent in supporting her candidate, even wearing an “I-heart-Hillary” button on her backpack. As the Ohio primary neared, the question was coming up a lot — was I going to vote for Hillary? There were four candidates left in the race — Clinton, Obama, John McCain and Mike Huckabee — and I was undecided.

The day before the primary, I sat the kids down. They were all excited about Ohio’s big place in the race and I felt I owed them an explanation about how I had made up my mind. So I broke the news to them — for a variety of reasons, I was not going to vote for Hillary.

The three of them were, well, crushed. The youngest, the five year old, actually burst into tears. This is when I realized what this all really meant to them. It wasn’t about the politics or the issues or the parties. When you’re a young girl growing up in a country that has never elected a woman president, the possibility of a woman winning the job is an intoxicating idea. A Hillary win would have meant they, too, could dare to dream to chose a path some day that others might think is crazy for a woman to try.

And the three of them just could not believe that, as the father of three girls, I wasn’t going to vote for the “girl president.”

I think they’ve forgiven me now. We’ve had long discussions about my reasons and our differing views on this year’s presidential race. My oldest daughter sat with me and watched Obama claim victory in the Democratic race last week. She was a little sad but she remains interested in the fall campaign.

Today, I finally got around to watching Hillary’s farewell speech. In it, she spoke to the hopes and dreams of girls and women — young and old — who supported her campaign, including some senior citizens who can remember a time when women were not permitted to vote.

I had to admit it was an inspiring and at times moving speech.

Overall, I think this election is an especially good lesson for young people in general. It has already shown that you can be a serious candidate for president of the United States even if you are a woman, an African American or a moderate in a conservative party.

And for some kids, those are life lessons that really matter.

Permalink | Comments (2) | Post your comment | Categories: Teaching and Learning

Comments

By Scott Elliott

June 9, 2008 10:55 AM | Link to this

Mary is right that there were some low moments for journalism in this campaign, especially on cable news. But there was also some very good coverage of the campaign out there, notably in some of the national newspapers and magazines.

By Mary

June 9, 2008 8:19 AM | Link to this

Scott, maybe you should also sit them (and me)down and explain the utter bias and sexism of “adults”/”professionals” in the “liberal” and “conservative” news media in this campaign. I have never seen anything like it. I follow political stories even when there is no presidential election, and as I say, I have never seen anything like the bias and sexism I have seen throughout this campaign and even now, after Hillary suspended her campaign. To me, the failure of the press to present objective reporting to the American people is even more of a critical milestone than a black and a woman running. It is difficult for me to watch the news anymore, and that is about all I watch.
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