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Turns out it wasn't hard to do. That night, Boehner choked up as he recounted his bootstraps climb from blue-collar family of 12 children, working his way through college. Then came this month's broadcast of a "60 Minutes" interview in which he broke down repeatedly
-- over his humble rise, about his concerns for children's chances at the American dream, when his wife praised him. That led to some ridicule by detractors, some questioning his sincerity or emotional stability. Asked for response, Boehner's office referred to his explanation to the CBS interviewer Lesley Stahl: "What you see is what you get. I know who I am. I'm comfortable in my own skin. And everybody who knows me knows that I get emotional about certain things." Colleagues and other people who've known Boehner for years agree that he's long worn his emotions on his natty sleeve. "It's not anything new with Speaker-elect Boehner," said Gene Beaupre, Xavier University political scientist. "I've seen him, years ago, in front of several hundred people at a conference get pretty emotional, talking about his own life and the chances he got." Beaupre thinks that people accept such displays as long as they seem genuine, and can even admire politicians who have deep feelings and aren't afraid to express them. And, the more males who cry in public, the more who are likely to follow. "I do think when you see people in power showing their emotions the way these gentlemen have, I think it makes it easier for others to do the same," Beaupre said. Among those not crying in public? Boehner's predecessor, Democratic speaker Nancy Pelosi, and other prominent women, some of whom wondered aloud about whether women would still be accused today of being too emotional and soft. Former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin recently took a break from shooting caribou, climbing mountains, and camping out in the Alaskan wilderness to ponder that point. "I don't know if a woman would be given a pass necessarily," the former governor told ABC News, while saying she respects Boehner for showing his feelings about things that are important to him. "But that's one of those things where a double standard certainly is applied," she added. "I'm sure if I got up there and did a speech and I started breaking down and cried about how important it is to me that our children and our grandchildren are provided great opportunities, I'm sure that I would be knocked a little bit for that."
[Associated
Press;
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