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As First Lady, Jill Biden Will Make History for Working Women
When Joe Biden is inaugurated, Jill Biden will become the “first professor FLOTUS.”…
What strikes me most about Jill Biden is her compassion. When I interviewed her for Vogue in September, she was a bright light through the Zoom screen, taking the time to ask me about my daughter’s return to school: what grade she was in, whether she’d be remote or in person—the details that matter to teachers, moms, and grandmas.
That and she is a 69-year-old mother of three with a Dr. in front of her name, signaling one of her four degrees. When Joe Biden is inaugurated in January, Jill Biden will become the “first professor FLOTUS,” as CNN coined it—the first first lady who plans to work outside the White House, continuing her career as an English professor at Northern Virginia Community College in addition to her planned causes: free community college, military families, expanding cancer research and education.
“I like working,” Jill Biden told me. “Like so many of your readers, I’m a working woman. [Teaching is] my passion. That’s what I love doing. That has been my career and really a major focus in my life, so I feel like I could handle it and do everything else that first ladies want to do.” Though her decision has been called insane by some, Jill seems determined and prepared. She already kept up her full-time professorial duties as the second lady during two terms of the Obama administration. “Teaching is not what Jill does,” Joe Biden said in his wife’s Democratic National Convention introduction video. “It’s who she is.”
With Jill Biden in the White House, we will no longer have to wonder what, if anything, the first lady is doing. She represents a beacon for the East Wing, the chance to restore a sense of warmth and heart to the role. Jill, a 36-year educator, has made a career of caring. Her speech from an empty classroom at the virtual Democratic National Convention gave voice to the emotional weight parents like me had been feeling on behalf of our children throughout the pandemic. Here, finally, was a woman who understood the urgency and the sadness, someone who cared as much about sending children back to school as reopening restaurants and bars and hair salons.
“This quiet is heavy,” Jill said from the classroom. “You can hear the anxiety that echoes down empty hallways….The rooms are dark, as the bright young faces that should fill them are now confined to boxes on a computer screen.” Just as her husband, a man who has known loss and strived for bipartisanship, may be uniquely suited to lead in what is clearly still a divided country, Jill Biden is the right first lady for the moment, perfectly equipped to help steer the country out of an educational crisis.
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