'Deferential' Kellyanne Conway Says Her Gender Helps With Trump

'Deferential' Kellyanne Conway Says Her Gender Helps With Trump
'Deferential' Kellyanne Conway Says Her Gender Helps With Trump, “I think there’s a femininity that is attached to the way one carries herself or the way one executes on her duties,” the president’s counselor said in the interview published Sunday.
“I could tell you a great way that my gender has helped me with the president,” she said. “I’m actually unafraid to express my mind, but I do it very respectfully — very respectfully and very deferentially.”
And she also often serves it up with a “big smile,” she said last year.
Conway said that she considers Trump not only her boss but her “elder.”
“I don’t consider [Trump] my peer. He is my boss and he is my elder,” Conway said. “That has actually allowed me, in my view, to respectfully but forcefully express my opinion on certain matters.”
Conway, 50, presents an unusual figure in the White House. She can appear to be coquettish and sometimes wears eye-popping clothing color strikingly different from the typically more conservative fashion of a working woman. 
She was called out earlier this year on Twitter when she curled her legs beneath her on a couch in the Oval Office to snap photos of visiting heads of historically black governors with the president.
She considers herself “post-feminist, anti-feminist and non-feminist,” she said in the interview, because she believes feminists are “anti-male.”
She’s not big on the concept of sexism, except when the media calls her out, which she considers sexist. She recently blasted Anderson Cooper as sexist for an eye roll while he was interviewing her. It occurred as a testy Conway confusingly attempted to explain Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey among the shifting sands at the time of White House reasons.
Sexism has not been the case for Hillary Clinton, however, Conway insists. “Let me tell you,” she said in a Fox interview,  “Hillary Clinton is in search of sexism as a lame excuse for why her disastrous candidacy and campaign lost six months ago.”
There are only a smattering of women in a White House overwhelmingly dominated by white men. Only four of 24 Cabinet posts are filled by women, while more than 50 percent of the population is female.
“Attaching a hard and fast number to it is not as relevant as the contributions that are made by the woman who are at the table,”  Conway insisted to Business Insider.
“We’re heard and we’re seen and we’re listened to and we are sought out and sought after for our opinions and our judgment and our ideas and our insight.”
Trump told The New York Times in an interview last year that his then-campaign press secretary Hope Hicks gave him advice “in a very low-key manner so it doesn’t necessarily come in the form of advice. It’s delivered very nicely.”