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Would America Vote for Oprah Winfrey for President? (67% approval from white women)
Tech Financial ^ | April 17 2018 | By The Conversation

Posted on 04/18/2018 11:15:27 AM PDT by ethom

Would America Vote for Oprah for President?

The speculation centered on Winfrey’s possible presidential bid – while encouraging on its own – lacks a full assessment of all that Winfrey brings to the table. The experiences of black women, even those that are high-profile, are often constrained by how people view them.

By The Conversation

April 17, 2018

Would America vote for Oprah for president

America has had a black president.

Is the country ready for a black president who is also a woman?

Speculation about the candidacy of Oprah Winfrey makes clear that some voters think so. Granted, Winfrey says she won’t run, but friends, commentators and many in the Twitterverse are pushing for her to reconsider.

As a scholar of race and politics, I’m curious about whether Oprah will change her mind about running – and even more curious about whether she could win.

Occupying a unique space

A paper I recently published with Harwood McClerking and Ray Block tried to shed light on this question by examining Oprah’s first major foray into politics — her endorsement of Democratic candidate Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential election. Specifically, we wanted to know how the endorsement altered the public’s perception of her, as a way of understanding if people like the idea of a “political Oprah.”

First, it helps to understand just how popular Oprah was leading up to the 2008 election. From 2002 to 2006, Winfrey’s daytime talk show pulled in an estimated 7 million viewers every day. Winfrey also had racial crossover appeal, maintaining an audience that was predominately female, white and over the age of 55.

During this phase of her career, Oprah avoided politics, a strategy that may have helped her “transcend her race,” to borrow a phrase from political scientists Donald Kinder and Corrine McConnaughy.

For example, in an interview with the Jacksonville Daily News in 1986, Oprah described her high school experience: “Everyone went through the black-power phase … (but) I knew I was not a dashiki kind of girl.”

Talking to People Weekly a year later, Oprah said that during college at Tennessee State, a historically black college, she “refused to conform to the militant thinking of the time.”

“People feel you have to lead a civil rights movement every day of your life, that you have to be a spokeswoman and represent the race,” Oprah said. “Blackness is something I just am.”

Writing in 1994, media scholar Janice Peck asserted that Winfrey served “as a comforting, nonthreatening bridge between black and white culture.” She goes on to say that Winfrey minimized her race through “public rejection of black political activism and the Civil Rights Movement.”

Winfrey’s Obama endorsement

Michelle and Barack Obama campaign with Oprah Winfrey in 2008. AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain

This notion of Winfrey’s racial transcendence was tested in May 2007 with her explicit endorsement of Obama, which made her racial identity and political views salient to the American people. This connection was not lost on viewers, some of whom said she was trying to “sway her mass following.”

Politics scholar Costas Panagopoulos predicted that the endorsement would cause Winfrey’s popularity to suffer. It didn’t help that Winfrey’s endorsement of Obama alienated her from white women – the largest segment of her audience – who believed that, as a woman, she should have backed Hillary Clinton.

Winfrey and black women’s consciousness

Oprah isn’t the first black woman to struggle with two minority identities.

Gender studies scholars find that historically, black women reside in a unique space where they are marginalized by black communities due to their gender and sidelined by the feminist movement due to their race.

Claudine Gay and Katherine Tate assert in their research that the experience of being “doubly bounded” has resulted in the formation of a black female consciousness. Gender and legal scholar Kimberle Crenshaw argues that the experiences faced by black women cannot be understood through traditional understanding of race and gender discrimination. Crenshaw believes that the intersection of racism and sexism interact in a way resulting in shared experience with discrimination that is more severe for black women. To describe this situation, Crenshaw coined the term “intersectionality.”

The fragility of racial transcendence

To understand Winfrey’s transcendence and its fragility, we used Harris Polls’ measure of how Winfrey ranked relative to other television personalities regularly during a large span of her talk show, from 1993 to 2011. In the years leading up to her Obama endorsement – 2002 to 2006 – she was the nation’s favorite television personality. But immediately following her endorsement, her favorability dropped to No. 4. Over the next five years until her show ended in 2011, Oprah’s average ranking was No. 3.

Before her endorsement of Obama, individuals were favorable toward Winfrey at relatively equal levels – between 73 and 82 percent – regardless of their race and gender. After the endorsement, a gap opened up. Black women rated her 86.2 percent favorable. Black men still maintain the second highest favorability, but we see a drop from 81 percent to 72 percent. Similarly, the percentage of white women who hold favorable ratings of Winfrey drops from 73.4 percent pre-endorsement to 67.8 percent after.

By examining post-endorsement polling data, we argue that the impact of Oprah’s endorsement is an important factor that seems to follow the same breakdown. Her endorsement had the strongest tangible effect on black women, followed by black men, white women and white men.

These numbers are important when considering Oprah’s electability because blacks make up only 11.9 percent of the electorate. Having black support alone is not enough to win the presidency. Indeed, Obama built his success on support beyond the black community by having high levels of turnout from voters under the age of 30, low- to moderate-income workers – those earning less than $50,000 – and Latinos.

Oprah 2020?

Despite the seeming impact on her popularity, Winfrey has become more political over time.

For instance, in a recent series of articles in Oprah Magazine and on Oprah.com, Winfrey discusses race and racial awareness in a very different way than those interviews from the 80s.

In one article, she writes, “The audacity it takes to judge another because they don’t look or sound or act like you goes against the current of humanity.” In another: “We can’t afford to say race is just a black thing, or a Hispanic thing, or an Asian thing or a #StayWoke thing. It’s a human thing.”

The speculation centered on Winfrey’s possible presidential bid – while encouraging on its own – lacks a full assessment of all that Winfrey brings to the table. The experiences of black women, even those that are high-profile, are often constrained by how people view them.

The ConversationOprah’s claim that “time’s up” inspired many, but our research suggests that the more political Oprah becomes, the more aware voters will be of her race and gender. And that awareness will give her not one, but two, challenges to overcome.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Local News; Miscellaneous; Society
KEYWORDS: 2020demprimary; oprah2020; whitevote; womensvote
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

Edith and her kind are represented in the parenthetical headline statement and validate that the 19th Amendment sealed our doom.


21 posted on 04/18/2018 11:30:29 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: butlerweave
Doesn't say much for the 19th amendment, does it?

My dad (R.I.P.) is looking down and saying, "See? I told ya!"

22 posted on 04/18/2018 11:32:37 AM PDT by daler
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To: DJ Taylor
but but but.... didn't we have a 'transformational' president already? Why do we need Orca to throw her industrial size spanx in the ring...


23 posted on 04/18/2018 11:34:17 AM PDT by ethom
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To: ethom

Everybody gets a new car.


24 posted on 04/18/2018 11:35:17 AM PDT by rktman (Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator

To: WayneS

Of course she will not run. I doubt she would want any opposition “research” poking their its nose in her business.


26 posted on 04/18/2018 11:37:22 AM PDT by The Deplorable Miss Lemon (If illegals are here to do the jobs Americans won't do why are so many illegals on welfare?)
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To: ethom

If this dumb country can vote for a guy like Obama twice, I would not rule out anyone. I would not vote for her. In fact I never vote for any Democrat


27 posted on 04/18/2018 11:41:14 AM PDT by Lee25
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To: ethom
She said she is waiting for God to tell her to run.

Problem is that her religious feelings all center around her.

So, she will decide to run when she decides to run.

What I think is funny is that there is no one on the dem side who could beat Trump.

They have no Obama, no Clinton - their well is dry.

All they will have is Orcah?

28 posted on 04/18/2018 11:42:29 AM PDT by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: Slyfox
Orcah will never get past the initial vetting, ill bet there are some non nda covered people in Chicago with tales to tell about her Gayle and Steadman on those camping trips...


29 posted on 04/18/2018 11:45:56 AM PDT by ethom
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To: ping jockey

OPRAH WINFREY ADMITS DRUG USE - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/.../oprah-winfrey.../22391376-4674-463c-b4a0-efc...
Jan 13, 1995 - Oprah Winfrey, the popular host of television’s most-watched daytime talk show, broke down Wednesday while taping a program about recovering from drug abuse and admitted that she had smoked cocaine in her early twenties.

The 10 Most Successful Crackheads Of All Time - Elite Daily
https://www.elitedaily.com/money/the-10-most-successful-crackheads-of-all-time
Sep 9, 2013 - “All those years of snorting coke, and then I accidentally get involved in heroin after smoking crack for the first time. ... Oprah Winfrey. Gary Gershoff/WireImage. Who would have ever thought that the queen of talk show television used to be addicted to crack?


30 posted on 04/18/2018 11:46:37 AM PDT by DJ Taylor (Once again our country is at war, and once again the Democrats have sided with our enemy.)
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To: ping jockey

OPRAH WINFREY ADMITS DRUG USE - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/.../oprah-winfrey.../22391376-4674-463c-b4a0-efc...
Jan 13, 1995 - Oprah Winfrey, the popular host of television’s most-watched daytime talk show, broke down Wednesday while taping a program about recovering from drug abuse and admitted that she had smoked cocaine in her early twenties.

The 10 Most Successful Crackheads Of All Time - Elite Daily
https://www.elitedaily.com/money/the-10-most-successful-crackheads-of-all-time
Sep 9, 2013 - “All those years of snorting coke, and then I accidentally get involved in heroin after smoking crack for the first time. ... Oprah Winfrey. Gary Gershoff/WireImage. Who would have ever thought that the queen of talk show television used to be addicted to crack?


31 posted on 04/18/2018 11:46:38 AM PDT by DJ Taylor (Once again our country is at war, and once again the Democrats have sided with our enemy.)
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To: ethom

I think an astonishing number of women would vote for her. They think this is all some anti-male revenge game and are driven by childish emotions. Thank god for the women that wouldn’t.


32 posted on 04/18/2018 11:47:10 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's bes friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: ethom

There are millions of mental defectives in America, but are there enough to put Oprah over the top?

Doubt it.


33 posted on 04/18/2018 11:47:43 AM PDT by Jack Hammer
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To: DesertRhino

I swear to God, as a white woman I am ashamed of white women.


34 posted on 04/18/2018 11:49:16 AM PDT by mpackard (Read my Lip-Stick)
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To: ethom

35 posted on 04/18/2018 11:50:28 AM PDT by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: DesertRhino
but would middle American hausfraus in Ohio, Wisconsin or Pennsylvania vote for a black bisexual/lesbian?


36 posted on 04/18/2018 11:52:34 AM PDT by ethom
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To: ethom

“Is the country ready for a black president who is also a woman?”

Is the country ready for a president with an IQ of 60?


37 posted on 04/18/2018 11:54:42 AM PDT by dsc (Our system of government cannot survive one-party control of communications.)
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To: ethom
But then, there is this:


38 posted on 04/18/2018 11:55:19 AM PDT by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: ethom

Not this one.


39 posted on 04/18/2018 11:55:25 AM PDT by ataDude (.)
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To: ethom

If she did run and possibly win, I seriously doubt that she would do anything [tax laws, economy, etc
] to endanger her wealth, in any way..........she ain’t stupid...................


40 posted on 04/18/2018 12:19:04 PM PDT by Red Badger (Remember all the great work Obama did for the black community?.............. Me neither.)
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