“…For the nominees, being interrupted may stall their efforts to overcome the competence bias women and people of color face in interviews across professions (Boyd, Collins, and Ringhand 2018;Christensen, Szmer, and Stritch 2012;Haynie 2002;Lawless 2004;Nelson 2015). More broadly, since legitimacy and public support rest on representative inclusion in governing institutions (Badas and Stauffer 2018;Barnes 2016;Clayton, O'Brien, and Piscopo 2018;Harris and Sen 2019;Means, Eslich, and Prado 2019;Scherer 2023;Stauffer 2021;Widner 2023), public displays of bias against women and people of color can result in lower rates of ambition for members of those groups (Fox and Lawless 2014;Williams 2008) and aggravate a sense that our government does not represent them (Campbell and Wolbrecht 2006).…”