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An eight-year-old boy dressed as Hillary Clinton for Halloween — and Twitter responded

Pumpkins of the 2016 presidential candidates
Master Carver Hugh McMahon creates giant Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton pumpkins at Chelsea Market this October in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo | Getty Images)

A mother from Brooklyn, N.Y., took Twitter by storm yesterday when she shared a picture of her eight-year-old son in his Halloween costume: He dressed up as Hillary Clinton.

In a bright yellow blazer, with his hair blown out in Clinton’s signature 'do, he’s waving to the people and toting a candy box with the campaign’s logo on it. And that’s his real hair, his mother notes -- #notawig.

Apparently, @DebbersGar first pitched the costume to her five-year-old daughter, who turned her down flat. “Well, someone’s gotta be Hillary!” her son announced. And he pulled it off with panache.

Enter the internet.

People took the opportunity not just to air their political views (some Twitter responses suggested that he dress in a prison inmate uniform instead), but to criticize the idea that a boy could dress as a powerful woman – or, really, any woman.

Many of the more strenuous responses aren't printable.

But there were also parents who loved the idea. This mother shared a picture of her own son, dressed as astronaut Mae Jemison, “his hero,” she wrote.

https://twitter.com/sarah_gioia/status/792919639336505344

That photo quickly became a target too, for people who thought that a boy shouldn't dress up as an astronaut who happened to be a woman for Halloween. She deleted the Tweet.

Would people have batted an eye if a girl had dressed as Abraham Lincoln? Or George Washington?

Is Halloween a time when a little boy can be anything – a superhero, a mummy, a spider – except a presidential candidate, because she’s a woman?

The historic nature of Hillary Clinton’s candidacy – she is the first women to be endorsed by a major party for the presidency, in the entire history of the United States – has been overshadowed by other issues this election.

But this boy’s costume is a reminder that, for kids of any gender, dressing like a powerful politician no longer just means dressing like a man.

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