The problem here is that while Hillary Clinton is part of the discussion, the article's main thrust isn't actually Hillary Clinton, the article's point is that women in general have difficulty in US politics.I get what you're saying, but again- no one is debating that sexism exists. But sexists aren't the reason why clinton SPECIFICALLY did not get in. Trump got less votes than Romney, and less votes than McCain- but about the same number of republicans showed up as they always do to vote for the republican candidate.
there was no massive wave of sexists showing up to vote republican. it simply didn't happen. On the democratic end Hillary got the same votes john kerry did.
She failed to provide a convincing argument for 6-10 million DEMOCRATS that showed up for obama but didn't show up for Gore or Kerry to show up for her.
"sexism" isn't why.
But as with all matters tangentially related to Hillary Clinton, she becomes the focus of the subjectpeople complain that the media does this, but they in turn do it themselves!
The idea here isn't to assign blame, it's to examine an issue in our political system. There's plenty of railing against establishment...but not a peep against, and perhaps even defense of, the male establishment in politics.