• Kane's off to jail. Former Pennsylvania attorney general Kathleen Kane was sentenced Monday to 10 to 23 months in prison. She was convicted of—among other things—perjury and obstruction of justice for leaking grand jury documents to the media in order to embarrass a political foe, and then lying about it under oath. WSJ • Women of Wyoming. Liz Cheney is looking increasingly likely to win Wyoming's lone Congressional seat, which was once held by her father, Dick Cheney. Although men substantially outnumber women in Wyoming politics, if Cheney wins, she would be Wyoming's third congresswoman in a row. Fortune • Warren's way with words. Sen. Elizabeth Warren took on Donald Trump in classic Warren fashion yesterday: "He thinks that because he has a mouthful of Tic Tacs he can force himself on any woman within groping distance," she said during a campaign stop in New Hampshire. "I've got news for you, Donald Trump: Women have had it with guys like you." Business Insider • Condi's on the case. RiceHadleyGates, the consultancy co-founded by former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, has been hired to provide geopolitical risk analysis to RWC, a London-based asset manager. Financial Times • Not walking the walk? According to hacked emails from the latest WikiLeaks dump, the Clinton campaign was worried about journalists noticing the average $81,000 gender pay gap within the leadership team at the Clinton Foundation. Given Clinton's pro-equal pay stance, it's little wonder that staffers were concerned about the "huge discrepancies." CNNMoney • Hangouts don't help. While research finds that members of majority groups become less prejudiced against minorities when the two groups have more contact with one another, the same does not hold true when it comes to gender. The difference, it seems, relates to something called "benevolent sexism." New York Magazine MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Former Zynga exec Colleen McCreary has joined Vevo as chief people officer. |