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The Gender Gap (John Kerry Is No Babe Magnet)
National Review ^
| September 16, 2004
| Myrna Blyth (You Go Girl!)
Posted on 09/16/2004 7:46:12 AM PDT by presidio9
According to Time magazine's latest poll, the president has retained the "seismic voter shift" he earned during the Republican convention. He continues to lead John Kerry by eleven points among likely voters. Kerry's support has eroded in every group, and "most notably among women," as Time points out. "In early August, females gave Kerry a sizable lead over Bush: 50 to 36 percent. Now, women favor Bush over Kerry by 45 to 44 percent. Even in Florida, Kerry's 22 percent lead among women has been halved in the last few weeks. In the last presidential election, Gore won women's votes 54 to 42 percent.
Why is this so important? Well, for the last 40 years more women have voted in presidential elections than men. For the last 24 years, the percentage of eligible women voters who turned out to elect the president surpassed the percentage of men. In some key states such as Florida and Ohio the percentage of women voters was as high as 54 percent in the 2000 election. That's why both parties are reaching out right now to undecided women voters.
By the way, the gender gap has never been quite the chasm the media has loved to describe. Up until 1980 women tended to vote like the men in their lives. If anything, they tended to be a bit more conservative. But in 1980 Eleanor Smeal, a political scientist who became president of the National Organization for Women, noticed that while more women voted for Reagan than for Carter, a higher percentage of men voted for the Republican candidate. NOW met with the Democratic National Committee to highlight what they labeled "Reagan's Female Problem," and began to effectively promote to the media another new difference between men and women.
(Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: girliemen; katherineharris; lurch; myrnablyth; wisshaggable; womenvoters
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To: hilaryrhymeswithrich
UCC?
My brother's old alma mater. :-)
61
posted on
09/16/2004 11:03:15 AM PDT
by
Happygal
(liberalism - a narrow tribal outlook largely founded on class prejudice)
To: maryz
Well, he was mentioned when we were talking about plastic surgery. My friend Yvonne said: 'I wouldn't try that botox crap, look at that Kerry fella running for American President. They said he got botox, and he has a face like my granny's arse'.
62
posted on
09/16/2004 11:05:20 AM PDT
by
Happygal
(liberalism - a narrow tribal outlook largely founded on class prejudice)
To: maryz
63
posted on
09/16/2004 11:08:59 AM PDT
by
presidio9
(Islam is as Islam does)
To: Happygal
LOL! Well, they say distance lends perspective!
64
posted on
09/16/2004 11:09:25 AM PDT
by
maryz
To: presidio9
What? No barf alert? He looks even more gruesome in that one than the others!
65
posted on
09/16/2004 11:10:36 AM PDT
by
maryz
To: Happygal
Grand place Cork...loved it and would love to get back there one day...
To: hilaryrhymeswithrich; maryz; presidio9
Thanks for the ping! And the photo!!
I remember all the talk about Clinton, I'd like to forget it! I never could understand the attraction. If I never see the photos of Hill and Bill in swim wear again I'll be thankful.
G.W. is the type of man that used to be held up as the standard before the Feminists seized control. The "John Wayne" era. Amazing he managed to emerge from the same generation that produced metrosexuals like Edwards and Kerry!
Everything the Left mocks about G.W.'s qualities I love. Bring on the swagger! Bring on the cocky grin! Straight talk so I know where you stand. Decisive so I know I can count on you.
Time to kill the era of the "girlie man" and bring back the "Cowboy".
To: Soul Seeker
Time to kill the era of the "girlie man" and bring back the "Cowboy". Ditto to that!
68
posted on
09/16/2004 11:22:50 AM PDT
by
maryz
To: Soul Seeker
You hit it at every word...brilliant
To: presidio9; EllaMinnow
EllaMinnow posted this on another thread:
http://powerlineblog.com/archives/007856.php
Mrs. Rocket generally agrees with me on poltical issues, but sometimes for unexpected reasons. One opionion she has expressed that never would have occurred to me, is that the National Guard flap helps President Bush because they keep showing him in his National Guard uniform. I thought that was an eccentric view, but reader Shirley Camp agrees:
I don't know if anyone has ever pointed this out to you, but I think every time Bush is shown in his Natl Guard Uniform, is a plus for him because he looks so cute in it. His image is very appealing to women. I think this helps him instead of hurting him. What do you think? Maybe others can opine.
All I can say, Shirley, is that you're not alone. Maybe other readers will weigh in.
DEACON adds: My 16 year-old daugther agrees with Mrs. Rocket. She writes: "I saw the cover of this week's Newsweek, featuring a picture of both Bush and Kerry in their old uniforms, and I totally agree with Mrs. Rocket. Bush was a definite cutie back in his day, whereas Kerry has always been kind of funny looking." I guess I'm not wealthy enough to have a close family member who finds Kerry attractive.
Reader Ronald Nelson Brown has also weighed in with a very masculine perspective: "I like smart ladies like Mrs. Rocket! As a retired Naval Aviator, I have been amused/impressed by the constant showing of GWB in his aircraft each time the accucations are broadcast. He may be cute to many--but to me he looks fit, serious, competent and ready. Unless some aspect of the Guard services turns very negative, these shots are wonderful campaign banners."
UPDATE by Rocket: We ask, our readers respond! And so far the response is unanimous. Every woman who has emailed us agrees that the photos of W. in his National Guard uniform are a plus. The most common adjectives are "adorable" and "cute," with a number of readers adding "wholesome" and "clean cut." And Bush seems to pass the ultimate test; one reader, whose name we'll protect, wrote: "Even my lesbian associate commented how cute Bush looked in his uniform just yesterday when she passed by a TV it was on."
A number of readers also observed that before the current controversy, many people had no idea that President Bush once flew fighter jets--a very impressive accomplishment. And listening to the Dems would lead a casual voter to think that Bush skipped out on his National Guard service altogether, a notion that is refuted by the photos of him in a fighter plane.
298 posted on 09/16/2004 4:04:01 PM EDT by EllaMinnow (Dan would RATHER lie.)
I posted the picture on that thread; I knew you'd be proud of me. Thanks again.
70
posted on
09/16/2004 1:33:36 PM PDT
by
maryz
To: Soul Seeker; maryz; cyncooper
Our president has always been a cowboy!
71
posted on
09/16/2004 1:39:53 PM PDT
by
EllaMinnow
(Dan would RATHER lie.)
To: EllaMinnow
By the election, we'll all have cyber Bush family albums!
72
posted on
09/16/2004 1:46:53 PM PDT
by
maryz
To: hilaryrhymeswithrich
"By the way, bellygirl and Ann Coulter always get posted...where are the W pics? Did somebody say bellygirl?
LOL...
73
posted on
09/16/2004 1:50:31 PM PDT
by
LincolnLover
(Just Say No to Rampant Vanity Posting!)
To: presidio9
Jim Robinson's Master List Of Articles To Be Excerpted
The Gender Gap: Going, Going... - Myrna Blyth
According to Time magazine's latest poll, the president has retained the "seismic voter shift" he earned during the Republican convention. He continues to lead John Kerry by eleven points among likely voters. Kerry's support has eroded in every group, and "most notably among women," as Time points out. "In early August, females gave Kerry a sizable lead over Bush: 50 to 36 percent. Now, women favor Bush over Kerry by 45 to 44 percent. Even in Florida, Kerry's 22 percent lead among women has been halved in the last few weeks. In the last presidential election, Gore won women's votes 54 to 42 percent.
Why is this so important? Well, for the last 40 years more women have voted in presidential elections than men. For the last 24 years, the percentage of eligible women voters who turned out to elect the president surpassed the percentage of men. In some key states such as Florida and Ohio the percentage of women voters was as high as 54 percent in the 2000 election. That's why both parties are reaching out right now to undecided women voters.
By the way, the gender gap has never been quite the chasm the media has loved to describe. Up until 1980 women tended to vote like the men in their lives. If anything, they tended to be a bit more conservative. But in 1980 Eleanor Smeal, a political scientist who became president of the National Organization for Women, noticed that while more women voted for Reagan than for Carter, a higher percentage of men voted for the Republican candidate. NOW met with the Democratic National Committee to highlight what they labeled "Reagan's Female Problem," and began to effectively promote to the media another new difference between men and women.
For the next two decades, the notion that men and women voted differently and that despite class, education, and income women all voted alike simply because they were women became an accepted fact, endorsed by Democratic operatives and a sympathetic press. But, of course, there were always significant differences between groups of women voters. And a far greater gender gap may be the one with which Democrats currently have to deal, because men now disproportionately vote Republican. In Time's current poll, men favor Bush over Kerry 56 to 34 percent.
But why the apparent turnaround among women? First of all, the pro-life, pro-choice debate that was supposed to fuel much of the gender gap is practically a non-issue among most women voters today. Besides, a key demographic in this election appears to be Catholic voters. Kerry and his wife claim they are deeply conflicted about the subject of abortion. Teresa Heinz Kerry told Newsweek early in the campaign, "My belief...is that women do not want to have abortions. With the exception of people who are mindless and there will always be mindless people of both sexes most women wouldn't want to." Not exactly the sentiments Democratic campaign officials would want to promote to pro-choice women voters.
Then there's the First Lady Factor. Laura Bush is extremely popular among women and is working hard in swing states to support her husband. As a member of her campaign team joked, noting the enthusiasm her appearances can generate, "I don't call the new polls the Bush bounce, I call it the Laura Bush bounce."
By contrast, Teresa Heinz Kerry who disparages those who don't support her husband's health plan as "idiots" and scolds the president in her stump speeches makes lots of women just plain uncomfortable. In a feature in Harper's Bazaar, when asked by shoe designer and interviewer Kenneth Cole what she thought of the term "First Lady" she replied, "Ick." "Now Laura Bush may not like the term 'First Lady,' either," said a fan, "but she would never, never say, 'Ick.'"
But what is most important is that security has now become a kitchen-table issue, an issue women think and talk and worry about every day. Many former soccer or SUV moms have become concerned security moms. One woman told me, "9/11 changed me and my family's life. The school my children go to now has an evacuation plan. And we have lots of bottled water and batteries stored up. Potassium iodide tablets and emergency phone numbers for family members. That's the reality of our lives today. How can anything be more important to women?"
Last week's Russian school hostage crisis especially affected mothers who recognized the fear and panic on the faces of those helpless women and their terrified children. They could imagine and weep over the hideous Sophie's choice some mothers had to make: to leave with an infant or stay behind in that explosive-filled school with a still-captive child.
Bush's strong stance against terrorism is the most important reason the president's poll numbers are moving up among women. That's also why so many women who are Democrats remain on the fence about their candidate. Elizabeth Burnosky, a registered Democrat in Pennsylvania, says she opposes Bush's policy on Iraq but calls John Kerry, "a little wussy boy." She told an AP reporter, "I don't know whether Kerry would keep us safe."
Because of his strength with male voters, Bush does not have to win the women's vote decisively for an impressive victory. All he needs is to turn the gender gap into a sliver. At this point in the campaign, that is what he appears to be doing.
74
posted on
09/17/2004 6:45:07 PM PDT
by
ConservativeStLouisGuy
(11th FReeper Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Unnecessarily Excerpt)
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