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Reply #7: Clinton’s Man Problem [View All]

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Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU
WillYourVoteBCounted Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 12:42 AM
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7. Clinton’s Man Problem
Steven Waldman WSJ. April 30, 2008, 7:12 am

Voting Variables: Men, Women, Race and Religion



Steven Waldman is president and editor-in-chief of Beliefnet.com, and author of Founding Faith. Previously the national editor of U.S. News & World Report, he is a recognized expert on religion, social issues and politics. Click here for Waldman’s full bio.

Clinton’s Man Problem

Superdelegates and pundits have spent much of the last week assessing whether Barack Obama’s skin color makes him unelectable.
Well, here’s another awkward question: Why hasn’t Hillary Clinton been able to win men?

Consider this stunning fact: Sen. Obama has beaten Sen. Clinton among men in 23 of the 29 primaries for which we have exit polls. Even in big electoral states that Sen. Obama famously lost — such as Pennsylvania, California, Texas, New Jersey — Sen. Obama carried more men.
Now, one could flip this and say it’s more a sign of Sen. Clinton’s strength among women than her weakness among men. While Sen. Obama has energized the young, Sen. Clinton has brought more women to the polls. In eight contests, a remarkable 60% of the voters were women, and she’s done especially well among working class women. Newsweek’s cover story on Sen. Obama’s Bubba Gap might be slightly off: Sen. Obama’s biggest problem is with Bubba’s wife or girlfriend. (Bubbette? Marge? Danica?).

On balance, though, the gender gap has so far played more to Sen. Obama’s advantage. He has more delegates in part because he’s done better among women (winning the women’s vote in 12 states) than she has among men.

And the role of the gender gap will likely increase, not decrease, in the general election. In a March Pew poll, 26% of general-election voters said “men are better leaders than women,” and those voters are 26 percentage points less likely to support Sen. Clinton. In the Democratic primaries, a huge percentage of the electorate has been women. Yet in the 2004 general election, only 54% of the voters were women. To counteract this latent bit of sexism, Sen. Clinton would need to win women handily while increasing their turnout dramatically compared to the last election.



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