top of page
Search

Gender Gap Is Defining Feature of Deadlocked Trump-Harris Race

snitzoid

I don't understand? "The country is being run by a bunch of childless cat ladies". Why would that offend anyone? What's with the abortion thing?


It's not like 60% of adult females work or anything and would find that an affront? Oh, oops...sorry I guess I'm a little misinformed. Sorry!


Gender Gap Is Defining Feature of Deadlocked Trump-Harris Race

Split between male and female voters cuts across racial and economic lines

Donald Trump had a 10-point advantage among men in The Wall Street Journal’s most recent national poll.


By Catherine Lucey, Aaron Zitner and Xavier Martinez, WSJ

Oct. 15, 2024


WASHINGTON—Vice President Kamala Harris is struggling to win support from men. Former President Donald Trump has the same problem with women.


The gender gap has come to define a deadlocked presidential race, with a galvanized group of women voting for Harris because of her support for abortion rights and Trump wooing men with uber-masculine rhetoric. The split has affected the candidates’ media strategies and how they frame the issues most important to voters in the final weeks of the campaign.


While a divide between the sexes has become a fixture of modern elections, it appears to have broadened since 2020, cutting across many racial, educational and economic groups. Trump’s 5-point advantage among men in the 2020 election has widened to 10 points in The Wall Street Journal’s most recent national poll, in late August. President Biden’s 12-point edge among women in 2020 has become a 13-point lead for Harris.


Sarah Longwell, executive director of Republican Voters Against Trump, called 2024 the most gendered election she had seen, particularly among younger voters. “You don’t want it to become boys vs girls,” she said. “You don’t want to be in a political environment where your gender is the number one factor you are voting on.”


Trump will tape a town hall before an all-female audience on Fox News this week, and Harris on Monday rolled out an “opportunity agenda” for Black men, including business loans, job training and health initiatives. She did a town hall Tuesday with radio host Charlamagne tha God, who is popular with young Black men. Harris also has gone on podcasts and the Howard Stern show and will be interviewed by Fox News.


Polls show little evidence such overtures are working. In fact, with Black and Latino men moving toward Trump, the polls suggest that America is becoming a bit less divided politically by race and more divided by gender.


“I think men are very heavily economy-focused,” said David Lee, lead pollster for the pro-Trump MAGA Inc. super political-action committee. “It all has to do with the economy and inflation.”


While women also care about the economy, abortion weighs equally heavy as an issue in their voting calculations. In a recent Wall Street Journal poll of the seven battleground states, 27% of women—but 8% of men—listed abortion as the top issue motivating their vote for president. The finding reflects the emphasis female voters have placed on abortion rights since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. One third of women said they couldn’t back a candidate who disagrees with them on abortion compared with 18% of men who said so.


In a recent Journal poll of the seven battleground states, 27% of women listed abortion as the top issue motivating their vote for president.


The second woman to be a major party’s nominee—and the first woman of color—Harris mostly avoids overt references to her gender or race, in contrast with her lone female predecessor Hillary Clinton, who donned suffragist white in big moments. Still, Harris’s embrace of music and dancing is popular with the women who attend her rallies, and she has leaned into a set of issues that connect with women, emphasizing her support for the “care economy” and abortion rights.



Bri Ortega of Glendale, Ariz., said she was supporting Harris in part because of the abortion-rights issue. Photo: Ash Ponders for WSJ

Harris has excoriated Trump for appointing three of the justices that overturned Roe. “It’s clear that they just don’t trust women,” Harris said of Trump and Republicans during remarks on abortion rights last month in Atlanta. “Well, we trust women.”


Such priorities appeal to voters such as Bri Ortega, 27 years old, of Glendale, Ariz., who said she was supporting Harris in part because of abortion rights. She said she appreciated the family policies Harris had laid out, because, “I really like people having open avenues to living their life how they want, either having a family or not having a family, and being able to plan out when they would like to have one.”


Harris’s recent efforts to connect with men have included talking about owning a Glock and locking people up when she was district attorney of San Francisco, and she drank a beer on late-night television with Stephen Colbert.


“I think that Republicans are making her a caricature, and it’s important to have her out there, a real-life person, speaking to her experiences,” said Molly Murphy, a pollster for Harris. “Showing that she is tough is a really important thing for all voters to see.”


Harris’s efforts haven’t moved Bill Lloyd, 48, of Chandler, Ariz., a Republican. “The whole Colbert thing where Harris had the beer, that looked about as cringe as you could get,” said Lloyd, who co-owns and runs operations for a landscaping company.


Trump—who has long prized tough-guy talk—has projected a masculine persona, speaking about fighting enemies and suggesting that a “bloodbath” would ensue if he loses. During the Republican National Convention, he walked out one night to the James Brown song “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” and was praised on stage by former celebrity wrestler Hulk Hogan.


Lloyd said he appreciates Trump’s tough rhetoric. “It doesn’t make me want to run out and buy a gun and fight for my life and all this weird extreme stuff,” he said. “But I do understand it, because I come from a long line of people that stand up for what they believe in. And if you don’t, then you’re just going to get run over by the mob.”


Trump has a history of making derogatory comments about women, insulting former House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) and Hillary Clinton, along with media personalities such as Megyn Kelly and Mika Brzezinski. In 2023, a federal jury found him liable for sexually abusing and defaming advice columnist E. Jean Carroll in a Manhattan department store 30 years ago. He denied the charges.


Trump’s selection of Ohio Sen. JD Vance as his running mate was also seen as a nod to young male supporters. Vance has upset many women with comments about “childless cat ladies.”


Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said that Trump “is speaking directly to the concerns of women about the border, inflation, and foreign policy crises we face. If women want a president who is going to restore law and order and protect their families and bring down inflation, then President Trump is the only option on the ballot.”


Trump recently told women that he would be their “protector.” Ortega was unmoved. “I don’t feel as though I need a protector as a president, I just want someone to make decisions in the best interest of America,” she said.


Even as his support among female voters has lagged, Trump has claimed that insulting Harris would actually appeal to women. At a rally last week in Pennsylvania, Trump said one of his aides told him: “Please don’t call her dumb. The women won’t like it.” But he disagreed.


“The women want to see our country come back,” Trump said. “They don’t care. The women are tougher than the men, right?”

10 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Hamas back in charge of Gaza? WTF!

Ok, I don't hate to say I told you so. So sue me. Hamas Is Effectively Back in Control in Gaza With no alternative following a...

Sam Altman to Pocahontas "go f-ck yourself".

Sam Altman Chats Back to Sen. Warren He doesn’t sound intimidated, after giving to Trump’s inaugural. By The Editorial Board, WSJ Jan....

How was Voldemort's Inaugral address?

A short 30 minutes. He stayed on point, delivered the lines well and did I mention he buried Joe. I don't think Joe enjoyed the event. ...

Comentarios


Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page