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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRepublicans: How to make the gender gap worse
Did Scott Walker just give Obama an opening to drive an even bigger wedge between women and the GOP?
By Steve Kornacki
Theres been much discussion this week of the gender gap in the presidential race, which has exploded since Republicans decided in February to pick a fight with President Obama over contraception.
A survey of voters in 12 swing states released at the start of the week showed Obamas lead over Mitt Romney among women surging to 18 points, compared to just 1 with men. Among independent women in those states, Obama is now ahead by 14 points a complete turnaround from late last year, when he trailed Romney by 5 with the same group. The sizable overall leads that Obama now enjoys are largely the result of this movement of women.
But as National Journals Ron Brownstein showed, the shift is coming from a very specific subset of the female population: college-educated white women. As Brownstein explained,
They are consistently the portion of the white electorate that shows the most receptivity to activist government and also tend toward the most liberal positions on social issues, from abortion to gay rights to the availability of contraception.
In other words, the contraception debate (and, probably, the national controversy over Virginias mandatory ultrasound law) is probably at the heart of Romneys and the GOPs gender problem. The hopeful spin from Republicans is that it will go away once Romney is clear of the GOP primaries and the national conversation is again focused on the economy. It may turn out that theres something to this.
But its also possible the gender gap could get worse for the GOP. For that to happen, the party would have to do something to turn off blue-collar, non-college-educated white women waitress moms, as Brownstein refers to them. Right now, these women seem largely unmoved by the contraception debate, and by Democratic efforts to paint the GOP as culturally extreme. But what if there were an issue that ties gender and the economic interests of waitress moms together?
Greg Sargent flagged an interesting possibility today involving Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who just scrapped the states equal pay law. As Sargent notes, Walker is now a nationally significant figure, thanks to the efforts to recall him. Hes also a celebrated figure on the right, which is why Romney hailed him as hero last week.
http://www.salon.com/2012/04/06/how_to_make_the_gender_gap_worse/singleton/
HockeyMom
(14,337 posts)Barefoot, Pregnant, and BEATEN. To these men women are no better than dogs. Actually, they probably treat their dogs BETTER.