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Will Chelsea Change Her Name?

by Samuel P. Jacobs Info

Samuel P Jacobs
 
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BS Top - Chelsea Jacobs Name Patrick Mcmullan / Newscom Chelsea Mezvinsky might be more comfortable for a woman who’s made a point of avoiding the limelight, though Chelsea Clinton might be more helpful on a business card. Samuel P. Jacobs on the tense considerations.

With mere days to go until Chelsea Clinton, Bill and Hillary’s 30-year-old daughter, ties the knot with hedge funder Marc Mezvinsky, the press has more questions than answers: What will the dress look like? Who will attend? Is it really all going down next door to Annie Leibovitz?

But there’s one question which looks beyond the frenzy, over the nuptials, past the honeymoon, and into the broad American horizon: Will Chelsea Victoria Clinton keep her name?

“I learned the hard way that some voters in Arkansas were seriously offended that I kept my maiden name,” Hillary wrote in her memoir.

“You can bet on it that she will,” said New York political consultant Hank Sheinkopf, who worked on Bill Clinton’s reelection campaign in 1996.

The considerations must be tense. For a woman who has made a point of avoiding the limelight, would Chelsea Mezvinsky be a more comfortable handle? For someone who might come around to a more public role in the future, might Chelsea Clinton be more helpful on a business card? It’s tough to say what resonance the Clinton name will have in 20 years. For the time being, Bill Clinton may be trading in his reputation as a lady-killer for one as a statesman. (His approval rating is at 61 percent, besting both Barack Obama and George W. Bush.) And Hillary has added luster to the surname in her service as secretary of state. Mezvinsky isn’t exactly a fresh start: Marc’s father, Edward, a former Democratic congressman, spent five years in the pokey for fraud.

A survey of the sorority of first daughters presents two predictable options. Susan Elizabeth Ford, daughter of Gerald, held onto the patronym. Amy Lynn Carter, Jimmy’s only daughter, who married in 1996, avoided her husband’s name. (It is Wentzel.)

Dropping the president’s name has been a sign of protest: Ronald Reagan’s daughter Patti Davis, remembered for posing in Playboy, took Nancy Reagan’s maiden name instead of the Gipper’s. Caroline Kennedy stayed a Kennedy when she married designer Edwin Schlossberg. Richard Nixon’s daughters, Julie Nixon Eisenhower and Tricia Nixon Cox, went halfway, accepting their husbands’ names and moving the family name into the middle. Dorothy Bush Koch, daughter of George H.W. Bush, married in 1992 and kept up the middle-way tradition. So did the most recent first daughter to wed, Jenna Bush Hager.

But this mishmash of possibilities does illustrate the quandary facing wives-to-be in certain social circles. Even after many waves of feminism have crashed onto our shores, the vast majority of American women still take their husband’s name. A university study conducted in 2009 found that 70 percent of respondents said a wife should do just that. Yet the costs of trading Ms. for Mrs. are greater than stationery for some. Psychologists at the Tilburg Institute for Behavioral Economics Research in the Netherlands announced this spring that women who go by their husband’s name earn on average $1,500 less per month than their sisters who stuck with their maiden names.

“The challenge today is that there really aren’t any rules anymore. There are almost too many options, which makes it harder because every little decision is so open,” said Caroline Tiger, the author of The Newlywed’s Instruction Manual. “You really have to think about everything. It’s tough in [Chelsea’s] situation because her last name is so recognizable and comes with so much baggage, good and bad. It’s basically a brand in our culture.”

Chelsea might look beyond the first daughter clique and take a cue from her future mother-in-law, Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky, the former Pennsylvania representative who hyphenated her name when she married Mezvinsky in 1975. That path, said Tiger, is becoming passé.

No matter what she decides, Chelsea should also take a note of her mother’s peculiar name odyssey.

When Bill and Hillary said “I do” in 1975, somewhere between 2 and 4 percent of brides kept their maiden names. Hillary was one of them.

“It showed that I was still me,” Hillary said, according to Carl Bernstein’s biography.

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Around Little Rock, Hillary remaining Hillary Rodham struck some as a put-on for the lawyer from up north, with her hippie clothes and Wellesley manners. During Bill’s 1980 reelection campaign, her name became a weapon for the opposition, as the Republican candidate Frank White made a point of introducing his wife as “Mrs. Frank White.”

“I learned the hard way that some voters in Arkansas were seriously offended that I kept my maiden name,” Hillary wrote in her memoir. “…I was an oddity because of my dress, my Northern ways, and the use of my maiden name.”

July 27, 2010 | 10:40pm
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Comments ()

Featherpants

It would seem that keeping one's last name is ideological! Most (not all) Democrat children seem to keep their family name while most (not all) Republican children take their husband's name. Is this another example Republican men keeping their women subservient??

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5:14 am, Jul 28, 2010

Contrarianist

Where in the world are you getting those statistics from? I know where, but my reply would get flagged if I used that word.

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5:27 pm, Jul 28, 2010

Featherpants

No statistics sweetie. Read carefully! "It would SEEM" and NOT ALL after each assertion -- only a supposition from observation.

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4:41 am, Jul 29, 2010

nortonclybourn

I've been up all night wondering whether Chelsea will change her name. Thank God someone is on this important story.

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7:12 am, Jul 28, 2010

misha1000

I think she should change her name to Chelsea Goldberg.

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8:17 am, Jul 28, 2010

William D. Perry

With the amount of coverage devoted to an unimportant story like this, one wonders whether the Daily Beast purports to be a serious news site or is just another celebrity tabloid or woman's magazine. Sometimes I feel I can smell the perfume coming off the page.

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8:42 am, Jul 28, 2010

baxter99

I'm not crazy about her Joni Mitchell inspired name. She should change it to Millie Mezvinsky.

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8:57 am, Jul 28, 2010

majormoderate

It bothers me that people like you make money for writing crap like this. Who the f ck cares

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9:02 am, Jul 28, 2010

baxter99

Everyone who replied here cares one way or the other.

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10:03 am, Jul 28, 2010

majormoderate

Read the replies... Most reflect my opinion.

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1:12 pm, Jul 28, 2010

Pita22

I'm starting to think TDB is a secret branch of Congress - there is no middle ground. If a story is serious and newsworthy, the blog/forum/comments are like a World War with extreme and passionate views, arguments, put-downs, and rhetoric - mostly from the extreme right and left posters. If a story is fluff, the people start talking about perfumed pages, mocking, being sarcastic, and making jokes. Seems most people aren't happy no matter what the subject or comment is. I saw the headline and decided to come on here to say "Who the phuque cares?" But some of you already beat me to it. Finally there is agreement! I wish Chelsea happiness and she should do with her name whatever she wants and let the rest of the world argue over whether she made the right decision while she's on her honeymoon secluded in a hotel room somewhere!

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4:59 pm, Jul 28, 2010

Pita22

Too bad Mezvinsky doesn't have an X in it. She could be creative and become Chelsea Cli_Mex. Maybe she could get a job in a strip joint somewhere when times are bad.

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5:07 pm, Jul 28, 2010

Ginfidel

it's incredibly disappointing that women still change their names to their husbands' name in this day and age. is identifying yourself as a man's property (that's what the name changing is, folks) really worth it just to boost his ego? why don't men change THEIR names to their wives'?

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11:22 am, Jul 29, 2010

Billy Peeler

I wonder exactly what balance this couple is going to make between Christian and Jewish wedding customs. Will there be a canopy? Will they be married by a priest, minister, rabbi?
They seem like a nice couple. Hope they have a nice wedding, a quiet life, and can stay out of the public eye and be happy.

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1:00 pm, Jul 29, 2010

centralnjbill

Professionally, she must retain the Clinton name, but the Mezvinsky name can be her legal name and what she uses to book flights or hotels.

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5:57 pm, Aug 22, 2010
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