A 2006 profile of the character in
The Washington Post called her "wonderfully monstrous." "In Payne's study of her pathologies, Tracy's will is so fiery and her perfection so total that no one dares stand against her in her goal."
The Stranger wrote, "Like
Humbert Humbert, the
Reverend Harry Powell, and
Baby Jane Hudson before her, Tracy Flick is a real and lasting contribution to the cinematic understanding of the villain, and the feather in Witherspoon's cap." Tracy has often been a point of comparison in commentary on real-world political figures.
Hillary Clinton has more than once been compared to her. In a January 2008
video mashup produced by
Slate, campaign footage of Clinton was combined with clips from
Election to draw a comparison between Clinton's and Tracy's feelings about the inferiority of their opponents. The video was widely circulated and praised. A
Christian Science Monitor review of Clinton's 2003 autobiography,
Living History, quoted an excerpt in which Clinton discussed her participation during high school in a Cultural Values Committee and noted, "There is obviously some truth here, but the tone of the passage reeks of Tracy Flick, the overachieving, overly serious high school student from the film
Election. Not to belittle the efforts of the Cultural Values Committee, but a brief aside to show that Clinton understands that high school sociopolitics is not exactly on par with race relations would be nice." In 2008, after Clinton's defeat for the Democratic presidential nomination, multiple commentators likened Tracy to the Republican vice-presidential nominee, Alaska governor
Sarah Palin. Actress and comedian
Tina Fey credited Witherspoon's performance as Tracy as an influence for Fey's extremely popular,
Emmy-winning impersonation of Palin on
Saturday Night Live. In the late 2010s, in the wake of the
MeToo movement, some critics began reevaluating the character, noting that Flick, an inexperienced underage girl, was the victim of
child grooming by one teacher, and subjected to an effort to deny her legitimate election win by another, as revenge for her part in revealing the misconduct of the first. == As a cultural icon ==