I heard a lot of blow back after I wrote on Wednesday that I believed Caroline Kennedy just might make a very good senator. Nepotism is unseemly. But in real-life politics, a smart, well-connected senator with star power and the ear of the president is better situated to be an effective legislator than a member of Congress with years of experience, but no major achievement associated with his or her tenure. Especially grating is the argument from Nick Kristof and others that there is something un-feminist about appointing Kennedy. Historically, as my friend Kerry Howley has written, family connections have been one of the primary ways women break glass ceilings and ascend to positions of power. Men -- including the Bushes, Gores, Salazars, Udalls, Chafees, and Jacksons -- have been benefiting from these relationships for centuries. Of course, nepotism is classist, because it benefits those whose families have stature and influence. But nepotism has also, often, explicitly benefited women.
Today Andrew Sullivan, who rarely meets a woman whose political ambitions he approves of, writes that Kennedy is "less qualified than Palin," because at least Palin was a self-made woman. True enough. But I thought the point of politics was passing good policy -- policy with social utility. Can anyone really argue that Caroline Kennedy would be a less informed, coherent, intelligent legislator than Sarah Palin? That she is less motivated by the common good? It is a ridiculous analogy to draw.
--Dana Goldstein