When the Consumer Technology Association announced that Ivanka Trump, elder daughter and adviser to President Donald Trump, would be a keynote speaker at CES 2020, some of the very people who had been pushing for more female speakers, and more diversity in general, at the country’s premier tech confab actually protested.
Some, such as Forbes’ Carolina Milanesi, argued that Trump was a bad choice because she lacked tech credentials. “There are many more women who are in tech and are entrepreneurs who could run circles around Trump on how technology will impact the future of work,” Milanesi wrote.
On social media, others were more honest: They maintained that the first daughter shouldn’t have a place on the stage because, well, she is a Trump — and a distaff Trump, which made for some rather crude and misogynistic nicknames typed by anonymous scolds.
Yes, as critics point out, Ivanka Trump would not be on the stage if she were not the president’s daughter. Her job exists because of nepotism.