Pamela Isley and her cohorts had been under fire by the current GCPD commissioner, Vandal Savage, so to give herself the upper hand, Ivy ran for mayor. After a brief time skip, she actually convinced the public to vote for her, and Ivyโs now running the show in Gotham. However, the first issue of this new arc revealed that becoming mayor cost Pamela her relationship with Harley Quinn, something that perturbed fans of the couple everywhere. Well, now DC has clarified what broke the couple up, and unfortunately, the reason is pretty weak.
Poison Ivy’s New Job Drove Harley Quinn Away
Poison Ivy #43 by G. Willow Wilson, Jaime Infante, Arif Prianto, and Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou begins with a flashback that takes place during the time skip, not too long after Ivy has been elected mayor. The couple is in the middle of a big conversation, and Harley Quinn is in tears. She canโt understand Ivyโs perspective and fears that her partner no longer loves her. Ivy clarifies that she does, in fact, still love Harley, which only confuses her more, since Harley thinks that love should be the only thing that counts.
Unfortunately, thatโs not how things work now with Ivy working as the cityโs mayor. She tells Harley that Ivy has actual, legitimate power, and itโs the only thing keeping people like Savage off their backs. Harley is incredibly frustrated, as sheโs tried to play the part of first lady (being on her best behavior, dressing up like Jackie O, etc). But as Ivy says, itโs not enough. Ivy stresses that itโs not that being mayor matters more to her than Harley, but she needs the job and canโt allow anything to put it at risk.
It finally dawns on Harley what the problem is. Harley is too erratic and unpredictable (or, as she says, too much of a โclownโ), and Ivy fears the kind of behavior Harley could exhibit at televised events. Ivy tries to minimize the pain that Harleyโs feeling, telling Harley that sheโs not ashamed of her, saying how much Ivy values everything about Harley. But her words fall on deaf ears. Harley leaves Ivy in the Mayorโs office, leaving Pamela to ruminate on the conversation for weeks.
Optics Shouldn’t Be Enough to Tear Harley and Ivy Apart
This might be controversial, but Iโm not exactly opposed to Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn breaking up. Stories need conflict, and under the right circumstances, exploring how an intense job like being mayor affects a relationship would have been an interesting direction. But the way that itโs done here seems more to write Harley off as quickly as possible, based on the thinnest reasoning. I could understand it if Ivyโs new job caused her to ignore Harley or cause an issue if Harley got in serious trouble. But ditching Harley over optics just doesnโt feel right.
The time skip in this series is a big ask because it glosses over how the hell Gotham ended up voting for Poison Ivy. But we accept that for the sake of this narrative. Yet weโre simultaneously asked to believe that Harley Quinn is too much of a liability to Ivyโs career? Ivy literally has a former crime boss overseeing Gothamโs infrastructure and development! I get that separating Harley and Ivy causes friction for the story, but we just had them break up just a few years ago. Why are we retreading that so soon?
I can kind of accept that Ivy wants to play it safe because Vandal Savage is going wild as the cityโs police commissioner. And I can even see Ivy thinking that keeping Harley around isnโt good optics. But even with all that in mind, it doesnโt seem like Harley being around would change much. The voters obviously know who Ivy and Harley are and still voted Pamela into office. I really donโt think the powers that be needed to break them up, and hopefully, weโll see Poison Ivy correct this mistake before itโs too late.
What do you think about DC’s reasoning for Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn’s breakup? Let us know in the comments or share your thoughts on the ComicBook Forum!