Democrats are Losing Women!
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
Published on
DickMorris.com on November 19, 2010
Ever since the abortion debate burst on the American political scene in
the wake of the Roe v Wade decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, women
have voted more Democratic than men. Particularly unmarried women
have since typically backed Democratic candidates - attracted by their
pro-choice positions - by between ten and twenty points in each
election.
But now the trend has stopped! In one of the most important
findings in the post-election polls, the McLaughlin and Associates
polling firm has found that men and women both voted for Republican
candidates in the 2010 midterm elections! Pollster John McLaughlin
- one of the best - noted that "The Republican candidates for Congress
had a 12-point advantage among men (53-41) and a 7-point advantage among
women (50-43)." This finding is historic.
The Republicans won married women by 57-38, suburban women by 55-38, and
Independent women by 51-40. Democrats maintained reduced
margins among single women, poor women, and minority group
women.
While national surveys have indicated a ten point shift to
pro-life as opposed to pro-choice positions over the past twenty
years, so dramatic a reversal from 2008 (when Obama carried
women by huge margins) cannot be attributed to an attitudinal
change on the abortion issue. Rather, it indicates that
the issue has diminished in saliency, particularly as economic
conditions have worsened and concerns about the impact of
Obama's legislation on health care quality have grown.
In an earlier column, we indicated that the ascendancy of the
Tea Party movement, with its focus on economic, fiscal, tax and
health policy issues, has increasingly eclipsed the Christian
right as the biggest grass roots organization on the right.
As the Republican Party becomes more secular, apparently women
are feeling freer to vote for it. |
Of lesser note, but still interesting,
are the Republican gains among both African-Americans and Latinos.
For decades - ever since 1964 when things turned - Republican candidates
have counted themselves fortunate if they scored in double digits among
black voters. But, in the 2010 election, polling by the Zogby
organization found Republicans winning more than 20% of the black vote,
holding Democrats to a mere 3:1 win as opposed to the more usual 8:1 or
9:1 victories of recent years.
Among Latinos, Republicans also made some gains. After losing
Hispanics by only 10 points in the 2004 contest of Bush vs. Kerry, and
suffering a 45 point loss in 2008, the Republican candidates for
Congress in 2010 lost the Latino vote by 20 points.
The better GOP showing, of course, has a lot to do with the composition
of the black and Hispanic vote. In an off-year election, the
better educated and higher income members of both voter blocks are more
inclined to participate and down-scale voters are more likely to stay
home.
But the reversal among both groups may reflect the increasing
frustration of both groups with Obama's failure to deliver on his
economic promises. That blacks voted more Republican in 2010 with
an African-American in office than they did in 2006 is remarkable.
Among Latinos, the Zogby findings validate the results of a Pew Research
survey conducted in October, 2010 that found that Latinos were more
concerned about jobs, education, and health care than about immigration.
Asked to rate the importance of each issue, 58% of Hispanic voters said
education very important and 57% felt that way about jobs and the
economy. 51% gave that rating to health care, but only 31% said
immigration was "very important." 29% said the environment was.
The only issue blocking Latinos from embracing the Republican Party is
its anti-immigration position and the lingering doubts it engenders
about the Party's attitude toward Hispanics in general. But the
election of Republican Cuban-American Marco Rubio as Senator from
Florida may assuage these doubts. In any case, on the issues that
matter most to Latinos - education, jobs and health care, many
apparently felt strongly enough to switch to the GOP.
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***COPYRIGHT EILEEN MCGANN AND DICK MORRIS 2010. ***
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