Hillary Clinton Melts Down Over GOP Women

Maxim Elramsisy
Maxim Elramsisy

Hillary Clinton just can’t help herself.

Nearly a decade after her stunning loss to Donald Trump, the former Secretary of State is still trying to explain away her defeat—and now, she’s taking shots at any woman on the right who might actually accomplish what she failed to do.

In a recent appearance at the 92nd Street Y in New York City, Clinton was asked what advice she would give to America’s first female president. Her response? A direct attack on any conservative woman who dares rise to the top.

“Don’t be a handmaiden to the patriarchy,” Clinton warned. “Which kind of eliminates every woman on the other side of the aisle, except for very few.”

Translation: If you’re a Republican woman who believes in traditional values, limited government, or national sovereignty—you’re not a real woman in Hillary’s eyes. You’re just serving “the patriarchy.”

It’s a tired talking point from the left, steeped in references to The Handmaid’s Tale and drenched in smug superiority. But it’s also deeply insulting to millions of conservative women who aren’t playing anyone’s game but their own.

Ironically, the only Republican women Clinton respects are the ones who have turned their backs on their own party—like Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski and former Rep. Liz Cheney. Murkowski, who voted to convict President Trump during his second impeachment, gets a gold star from Clinton. So does Cheney, who endorsed Joe Biden and later Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024 after becoming the face of the January 6th witch hunt.

In other words, Clinton’s idea of a respectable Republican woman is one who helps Democrats hold power.

She couldn’t be more out of touch.

Maybe Clinton hasn’t met women like Kari Lake, Tulsi Gabbard, or Kristi Noem—strong, principled leaders who stand their ground and don’t ask permission from the liberal media to speak their minds. Or perhaps she’s afraid of them. After all, unlike Clinton, they haven’t built their careers on riding a powerful husband’s coattails and leaving scandal in their wake.

What Clinton’s rant really exposes is her own bitterness and desperation to stay relevant. She’s stuck in the past, still raging against Trump and blaming everyone but herself for losing an election she was told was in the bag.

That loss clearly broke something. And instead of stepping aside gracefully, she’s doubling down with condescending lectures and backward views on what a “real” woman should be—so long as that woman votes blue.

The truth is, the modern conservative woman is not just surviving—she’s thriving. She’s running for office, raising families, fighting for free speech, defending the unborn, and taking on the radical left without apology.

Hillary Clinton can call them “handmaidens” all she wants. But they’re not the ones who spent the last eight years obsessing over an election they lost. They’re too busy leading—and winning.