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ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos drew some pushback Wednesday night after he suggested that Vice President Mike Pence was "mansplaining" to Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., during the vice presidential debate.

During the network's post-debate analysis, former Chicago mayor and ABC News analyst Rahm Emanuel highlighted President Trump's deficit among women voters and claimed the image of Pence "attacking" Harris and moderator Susan Page would only worsen the GOP's standing among the female electorate.

"Sara Fagen, let me bring that to you," Stephanopolous pivoted to the female panelist, a former member of the George W. Bush administration. "Because obviously, Mike Pence is a former television commentator, does have a very calm demeanor, but I think that a lot of people were noticing some 'mansplaining' going on tonight."

"I don't know. I didn't see it that way, George. It didn't come across to me," Fagen responded. "I do think that he should have stopped talking a little quicker, but I don't think he was disrespectful of either woman."

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Stephanopoulos' colleague, ABC News correspondent Martha Raddatz, also dismissed the idea that Pence was "mansplaining."

"When I hear people ... talk about mansplaining and talk about these things with Kamala Harris and [say], 'A man shouldn’t interrupt her and it’s going to look bad' ... Kamala Harris is a vice-presidential candidate. She should be able to stand up for herself," Raddatz told Stephanopoulos later in the program.

"Yes, it’s history-making. Yes, you can talk about her history and who she is and she’s a woman of color there, but a man can interrupt another vice presidential candidate," Raddatz went on. "It is up to that candidate to talk back, to interrupt themselves, or to hold on to that debate in any way they could.”

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Critics slammed the ABC News anchor for leveling the "mansplaining" charge.

"Oh dear," columnist Rita Panahi reacted. "This is a rather desperate tactic, it may work on the Twitter demographic, but most normal people roll their eyes when they hear the term 'mansplaining.'"

"Pulling out the 'mansplaining' card. Harris must have performed worse than expected," Daily Caller's Mary Margaret Olohan concluded.

"mansplaining (verb): when a man whose politics you hate says anything whatsoever to a woman whose politics you love," National Review writer Alexandra DeSanctis quipped.

"Translation: Pence absolutely won the debate on merit so the media is using every lame excuse possible," former Secretary of Defense special assistant Amber Smith similarly wrote.

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