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Michael McAuliff
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War On Women: Republicans Think Male Votes Outweigh The Damage

Posted: 04/ 3/2012 3:28 pm Updated: 04/ 3/2012 3:33 pm

Women Election 2012
In Massachusetts, Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren leads Republican Sen. Scott Brown among women, while Brown leads Warren among men.

WASHINGTON -- Democrats think the recent surge of women voters backing President Barack Obama could be opening up a fresh gender gap that will yield dividends for races down the ticket. But Republicans think their rivals are overlooking the other half of the equation: the man vote.

Democrats certainly have something to highlight after two national polls found Obama leading GOP frontrunner Mitt Romney largely on the strength of women's support. A Gallup/USA Today poll of swing states, released Monday, found Obama statistically tied with Romney among men, but leading by 18 points among women. Similarly, a Pew poll last week put Obama's lead among women at 20 points.

Down the ballot in Senate contests, the gender gap remains, but with a switch. Majorities of men are going for the GOP candidate in many states, and Republicans suspect Democrats ignore that at their peril.

"When you consider that it's the Republican Senate candidates who are currently leading in Nevada, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Arizona and North Dakota -- with effective dead heats in Virginia, New Mexico, Florida and Wisconsin -- it appears that it's the Democrats who have a growing gender gap problem -- with male voters," said Brian Walsh, communications director for the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

In Virginia, for instance, where the approval rating of popular GOP Gov. Bob McDonnell recently took a hit when the legislature tried to pass a bill forcing women to undergo an invasive medical procedure before an abortion, women voters are buoying former Democratic Party Chairman Tim Kaine, who is essentially tied with former GOP Sen. George Allen, according to a Quinnipiac University poll. Kaine, who is also the former governor, is ahead among women voters, leading Allen 45 to 37 percent. But Allen almost flips the balance with men, leading 45 to 40 percent. Moreover, Kaine was doing about the same or slightly better with women a year ago, before the abortion controversy.

Massachusetts tells a similar story. Democratic consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren and Republican Sen. Scott Brown are in a dead heat, with women favoring her by 10 points and men favoring him by 13 points.

"Clearly, [the Democratic] party's message of higher taxes, bigger government and more wasteful Washington spending isn't playing very well in states across the country," said Walsh, downplaying talk of a GOP "war on women."

Democrats would certainly disagree with that reasoning, but Walsh's point that Republicans are doing better with men is true. And while Democrats suggest that women are increasingly alienated from a GOP linked to recent harsh attacks on women -- such as Rush Limbaugh's demeaning of George Washington University law student Sandra Fluke -- some analysts are not sure that it matters or that the "war" is moving the needle.

"It's been happening since the 2010 election," said Quinnipiac's Peter Brown, noting that in places like Ohio and Virginia the Democratic candidates were doing even better with female voters in 2011. He suggested the gap has more to do with Republicans, especially on the state level, carrying through on their election promises.

"Republicans elected governors who promised they would balance the budget and not raise taxes, and they did it," Brown said. "If you're not raising taxes, you're cutting spending, and they cut a lot of state programs."

The problem for many women, he said, is that those budget cuts have brought into question the future of various safety net programs, potentially removing fallbacks that families might need. "Women are more risk averse than men in general, and it shows on questions of economic security," Brown said, adding that culture war debates over abortion and contraception do not rank among the top issues for voters.

He agrees that the gender gap is a good barometer, however. "Think of it as a sliding scale," Brown said. "When the Republicans do well, they're breaking even among women and dominating among men. When Democrats do well, they're breaking even among men and dominating among women."

But trying to play gender politics can be complicated. "You can't oversimplify the gender gap," warned the University of Virginia's Larry Sabato. "It's too complex and it's too long-lasting," he said, noting that it's created not only by views on so-called women's issues, but also on factors as diverse as environmentalism and economics.

Still, Democrats are doing what they can to move the barometer their way. They argue that the recent debates on contraception, abortion and Planned Parenthood are having the effect they would like.

Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spokesman Matt Canter thinks that women are increasingly turned off by the GOP and could prove decisive in numerous Senate contests.

"The Republican Senate candidates around the country have embraced an agenda that aims to roll back access to basic health care services like cancer screenings and possibly even outlaw common forms of contraception," said Canter. "Republicans may be completely ignorant to the impact this could have on women's health, but these out-of-touch politicians are starting to see the political impact this Republican war on women is having in the polls."

Canter and others point to contests in states including Virginia, Massachusetts, Ohio and Florida where a pronounced gender gap favors the Democrats.

In Ohio, the argument does look strong, with Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown tied with Republican state Treasurer Josh Mandel among male voters, but leading by 10 points overall thanks to a 17-point lead with female voters, according to a Quinnipiac poll last week. In Florida, a Quinnipiac poll shows Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson with a 14-point lead among women over the GOP frontrunner, Rep. Connie Mack.

Some analysts do see a prime opportunity for Democrats.

"It's certainly pushing some women toward the Democrats, and I think it's mobilizing a lot of women, which is probably even more important than trying to convert somebody," said Peverill Squire, a University of Missouri political scientist, referring to both state and national debates.

"I think it's probably getting a lot of women a lot more interested in the campaign, a lot more concerned with the campaign," Squire said.

That may give Democrats the momentum to counter the already motivated camps on the GOP side, such as Tea Party supporters and evangelical Christians, who see the new federal requirement for employee insurance to cover contraception as an issue of religious freedom rather than health care.

"I think the people who see it as a religious freedom position were already on the Republican side of the equation and probably already interested, so I think this has generated a lot of motivation and incentive on the Democratic side that wasn't there before," Squire said. "To the extent that people thought 2012 was going to be a replay of 2010, this is beginning to dissuade them from that. The Democrats probably have to feel a lot better than they felt five or six months ago."

Squire suspects the public debates will change between now and Election Day, making it unclear what the final impact will be.

Sabato said that more involved women could still help the Democratic Party. "You want to get your activist base not only energized, but more energized than the other side, and issues like this undoubtedly help the Democrats to do that," he said.

And while he agreed that Republicans have the edge with men, Sabato noted he likes to make another point that Democrats are surely embracing.

"The fact is, women make up 53 percent of voters in the country. Who do you want on your side if you want to win elections?" he said.

Quick Poll

Will the 'war on women' make the gender gap so wide that Democrats romp in November?

VOTE

Michael McAuliff covers politics and Congress for The Huffington Post. Talk to him on Facebook.

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WASHINGTON -- Democrats think the recent surge of women voters backing President Barack Obama could be opening up a fresh gender gap that will yield dividends for races down the ticket. But Republican...
WASHINGTON -- Democrats think the recent surge of women voters backing President Barack Obama could be opening up a fresh gender gap that will yield dividends for races down the ticket. But Republican...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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peacekitten 07:08 PM on 04/03/2012
i cannot urge people strongly enough to find and read the SP:C's report on the war on women.

its supporters are truly disturbed.  they are friends of absolutely NO ONE, men or women alike.

one of their most admired figures is a man who committed an act of self-immolation in 2009 outside a new hampshire courthouse.  he was upset after having been denied custody rights over his  Read More...
06:14 PM on 05/08/2012
I am a woman and would never, and I say never vote republican....this is not something new the repubs have always downed women and their rights. It's just that more women are waking up to it finally. Go Obama. Romney is only for the rich, that is how he will keep making his millions off the backs of us middle class. Is this country really stupid enough to not know this. When someone has off shore accounts to avoid income tax...and paying much money in foreign taxes..you people better waked up and smell the coffee.
10:02 PM on 04/24/2012
We as women need to stand togther. It doesnt matter what race you are. It doesnt matter if you are working or not. It doesnt matter if you are a mother or not a mother. If doesnt matter if you are straight or gay. What matters we need to get off the couches and start complaining about these republicans. Do something. We need to march. Write to our congressman. republicans wants us to go back to 1800 when the man was completely control. We as women have come too far to let them rule us.There are more women in this world than men. Since the Democrat lady made the statement about romney wife, his wife is taking advantage of it. She was wrong to make that statement but I see where she is coming from. Dont let Romney wife come up with these sad stories. When the lights goes out in her house, she is on his side.
11:19 PM on 04/05/2012
As far as I am concerned, the repubs are totally out of touch with what the American People really want. Although I seem to find this in general with politics. Elected offiials should be listening to the people they represent, not just trying to benefit their own personal interests. I believe want republicans to stop trying to limit women's services and health care, stop catering to the rich and ignoring everyone else. Clean up our environment, help our country to become more energy self efficient and bring our soldiers home. It's too bad that many good, intelligent and talented people who should be in a position to govern, but it all seems to come down to how much money you have and not how qualified you are..... Just like high school and the "popular" crowd all over again.
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PalaceOfWisdom
Want gun control? End the MIC
03:06 PM on 04/05/2012
"Republicans elected governors who promised they would balance the budget and not raise taxes, and they did it," Brown said. "If you're not raising taxes, you're cutting spending, and they cut a lot of state programs."

"The problem for many women, he said, is that those budget cuts have brought into question the future of various safety net programs, potentially removing fallbacks that families might need."

For months I've been trying to get it across that the war on women is one huge gambit to extend the Bush/Obama tax cuts for the rich again this December. Women's rights are set to be this year's "hostage" in another staged crisis to benefit the 1%, most likely centered around funding for Planned Parenthood and other services for women. While you get angry and argue over birth control, austerity is quietly being ushered in to undermine your autonomy in every other aspect of life.
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CarlyQ
Without followers, evil cannot spread.
11:29 PM on 04/04/2012
It's quite baffling they would think men's votes will outweigh women considering the only men they've ever been pandering to are wealthy, white males.

Everyone else they have alienated.
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01:48 PM on 04/05/2012
I disagree. They are pandering even more to a much larger demographic: under-educated lock-steppers who live in fear of anything that is "different" from what they've always known.
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brahdog
hello walls
02:58 AM on 04/06/2012
and they are the most determined and charged voters, as the Geezers Obstructing Progress know full well
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
diverjay
The Depth of Liberal Hypocrisy is Beyond Fathom.
08:50 PM on 04/04/2012
I watched the "War on Women" on the Today Show yesterday. So much scorn and disdain against Sarah P for being a strong conservative woman. It was sickening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
new beginning
Practice random acts of kindness-change the world
09:33 PM on 04/04/2012
The "war on women" is a liberal construct designed to inflame the uninformed uneducated liberal masses.

Its just a talking point like the poor Obama needing to "clean up Bush's mess".

Totally meaningless.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phyllis Copeland
Shout into the void, don't weep in the darkness
12:01 AM on 04/05/2012
No, the War on Christmas is fabricated. The War on Women is very real and anyone following the news could spot it with their eyes closed. But that's ok, keep telling yourself that to make yourself feel better. It'll be another four years of making sh@# up to maintain the false sense of superiority, so *shrug* whatever floats your little boat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kellywelch
03:12 PM on 04/05/2012
Yeah, but the christians in this country are being persecuted, right?

Turn the channel once in a while, you might become enlightened (that means you might realize that Fox news is full of crap).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
new beginning
Practice random acts of kindness-change the world
08:44 PM on 04/04/2012
I voted No. And not because the men will pull the GOP through. It will be the women who do the heavy lifting. As usual!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lady1genius
No se puede tapar el sol con un dedo
03:38 PM on 04/04/2012
This must mean republicans think all men approve of the shenanigans they have been pulling on women. They don't. Not even most republican men approve.
Anything you do to women regarding the right to choose contraception and abortion also affects MEN. They have wives, girlfriends, mothers, sisters, daughters and friends who are women.
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Phyllis Copeland
Shout into the void, don't weep in the darkness
12:06 AM on 04/05/2012
Too right! Most of the men I know are feminists, too, and they are angry at the GOP on behalf of the women in their lives they love and care about.
pamela18335
Ignorance can be fixed; stupid is incurable
03:20 PM on 04/04/2012
Male votes outweigh the damage? Are they deficient in arithmetic?

More women exercise their right to vote than men. And we are pissed off!

Not all men vote Republicant.

But don't let me disturb their "reality"!
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Phyllis Copeland
Shout into the void, don't weep in the darkness
12:09 AM on 04/05/2012
The right has shown a severe impairment when it comes to basic mathematics since Reagan's time, so I'm not terribly surprised that they are significantly unaware that 53% is a majority of voters. Collective *facepalm*.
itolduso
lateral thinker
03:09 PM on 04/04/2012
Republicans believe they can make up for the loss of women's votes by appealing to men...and that probably works....with OLD men....but I know very few younger men who want their daughters to grow up to pay more for health insurance that doesn't cover their basic needs, or to earn less pay for doing their jobs. I have yet to meet a young man that actually thinks it's a good idea to cut funding to the nursing homes that his grandma (or Mom) may have to live in, or to change their medicare into coupons for insurance and reducing their social security checks which already aren't enough to live on. The young men I know don't want it to be more difficult for their partners to avoid pregnancy, don't want the state interferring in her health care decisions or subjecting her to unneccessary medical procedures. The young men I know the the Republican Party has gone nuts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lady1genius
No se puede tapar el sol con un dedo
03:42 PM on 04/04/2012
It doesn't even work with old men. My husband and I are both in our fifties, so we won't be needing contraception anytime soon. But we do have a daughter who does. And granddaughters who will some day need contraception. And those of us who are "a certain age" remember when both contraception and abortion were crimes. We have no desire to go back to that, so don't think it's just the young who are angry.
GuiltyUndertaker
no se mata la justicia!
04:14 PM on 04/04/2012
Amen. I'm 58 and I've never voted for a Republican. I've always felt the Republicans have distain for women for the same reason they have distain for minorities, gays, immigrants (except from Cuba) and those who prefer peace to war. Republicans opposed Griswold and Roe and foamed at the mouth over the Warren Court in decades of the 1960s and '70s.
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01:54 PM on 04/05/2012
f/f!
I have 3 grown sons and 3 wonderful daughters-in-law. They are all well-educated young professionals. They can't believe there are apparently still so many geezers out there who appear to be stuck in "Mad Men" episodes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CynAnne
Laureates in Fact and Reality
03:08 PM on 04/04/2012
(Credit to Debbie Shoemaker for her brilliant solution):

Every man who supports and/or votes for any state-legislated 'anti-choice' bill will need to submit his DNA so all of these 'precious babies' will have financial support - no negotiating and no shaming of the mother. Every newborn will be DNA typed in the hospital and the father, upon DNA confirmation, will be billed. Failure to provide proof of an inability to pay will result in imprisonment and/or fines levied, and taxes will be raised to cover the imprisonment of the aforementioned fathers and the care of the infant. I know it is so hard to believe but there is a man involved in EVERY pregnancy and it is high time they are held to account.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dimplesmile7
01:08 PM on 04/04/2012
The republican's lost is a gold mine for the democratic party.
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PalaceOfWisdom
Want gun control? End the MIC
03:35 PM on 04/05/2012
Never underestimate the ability of Democrats to lose despite being on the winning side of an issue.
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brahdog
hello walls
03:01 AM on 04/06/2012
sad but true
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eilish
Life ain't like a box of chocolates
01:05 PM on 04/04/2012
Ladies, if you wish to get men in line this voting season, remember in which part of your body the power lies. My partner has reminded me of this.

This is too important to worry about political correctness - fight dirty!
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trumbull desi
If I have something pithy to say, see below
03:13 PM on 04/04/2012
Excellent advice.
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
05:07 PM on 04/04/2012
time to dust of an updated version of lysistrata!
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ennis438
12:55 PM on 04/04/2012
Neither men or women are in favor of a Taliban party in America and that is exactly what today's GOP is.
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kathy smelser
10:31 AM on 04/04/2012
i hope that the Republicans continue to believe this ..it will then be no surprise that they lose in Nov.