White Women Cold Toward Obama

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>
White women cold toward Obama</font size></center>



080529_obamalede878.jpg

Forty-nine percent of white women view
Obama unfavorably, while only 43 percent
hold a favorable opinion. Photo: AP


Politico
By DAVID PAUL KUHN
May 30, 2008

Barack Obama’s favorability ratings among white women has declined significantly in recent months, particularly among Democrats and independents, presenting an immediate obstacle for the likely Democratic nominee as he moves to shore up his party’s base.

According to a new report by The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press:
  • 50% of white women now have a negative perception of Obama;

  • 49% of white women view Obama unfavorably;

  • Only 43 percent hold a favorable opinion;

In February, 36 percent of these women viewed Obama unfavorably, while 56 percent had a positive perception of the likely Democratic nominee.

Over the same period, Democratic white women’s negative view of Obama increased from 21 percent to 35 percent, while their positive view decreased from 72 percent to 60 percent — roughly the same rate as white women overall.

White men, in general and among Democrats, have shown only a slight drop-off in their perception of Obama — one-third of the shift seen in white women. About 20 percent of Democratic white men have an unfavorable view of Obama, a figure which has remained stable since February.

Pew also found that among self-described Clinton supporters, the negative shift against Obama is more severe among women than among men.

The Pew findings come as Obama’s campaign struggles to close up the primary race while also attempting to avoid the perception of pushing Hillary Rodham Clinton out, for fear of offending her most loyal supporters — the largest bloc of which are white women.

Still unknown is whether white women’s support for Clinton would translate into problems for Obama in the general election.

Intraparty divisions that arise during the primary season are typically mended over the course of the general election. Bill Clinton struggled with college-educated Democrats in the 1992 primary, as John F. Kerry did with young Democratic voters in the early stages of the 2004 race. Both candidates won back these blocs in the general election.

But the Democratic primary race of 2008 is without modern precedent, insofar as black support for Obama and white female support for Clinton are tied up in the symbolism of each candidate’s historic presidential bid.

“There is some sense of the visceral investment with Clinton,” said Celinda Lake, a Democratic strategist. Lake believes once the general election is under way, these same white women will gradually move away from McCain over issues, with the expectation that Clinton will campaign on Obama’s behalf if he is the nominee.

“In the long run, women will watch Hillary Clinton’s reaction, how she’s treated by Barack Obama,” Lake added.

White women as a whole now prefer John McCain over Obama, by 49 percent to 41 percent. Last month, Obama was ahead of McCain among white women, 49 percent to 46 percent. The head-to-head matchup between McCain and Obama has not significantly shifted among white men.

“There is no question that white women were — especially older women, not young women — Hillary Clinton’s base in the primary, and there is going to be some repair work that has to be done,” Democratic analyst Anna Greenberg said. “There is no reason to believe that these Democratic white women are not pursuable.

“The priority is going to be to bring back these voters,” Greenberg added.

Kellyanne Conway, a Republican pollster who has worked with Lake on surveys of women, said that “the steady shift of white women away from Barack Obama” could prove “enduring heading into November.”

“These women have two issues at the top of their agenda that require experience and reasonableness — war and economy,” Conway said. “For many of these women, when they hear Barack Obama talk about change they hear revolution, not incrementalism."

Conway believes that McCain has particular strengths with these women that allow him to be viewed as independent of the Republican brand.

“Those women will likely vote Democratic down ballot,” she added. “This race is now Barack Obama vs. John McCain.”

Democrats have come closest to capturing the White House by winning minorities by large margins and nearly splitting white women, as they did in 2000. Republicans have generally relied on their dominance with white men to put them in the White House, while winning at least half the vote among white women.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0508/10691.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>
White Women Take the Gloves Off</font size></center>


Politico.com
By Froma Harrop
June 3, 2008

The woman who shouted "McCain in '08" at the Democratic rules committee was speaking for a multitude. After mounting for months, female anger over the choreographed dumping on Hillary Clinton and her supporters has exploded -- and party loyalty be damned. That the women are beginning to have a good time is an especially bad sign for Barack Obama's campaign.

"Obama will NOT get my vote, and one step more," Ellen Thorp, a 59-year-old flight attendant from Houston told me. "I have been a Democrat for 38 years. As of today, I am registering as an independent. Yee Haw!"


<font size="3">11 Point Swing in 1 Month</font size>

A new Pew Research Center poll points to a surging tide of fury, especially among white women. As recently as April, this group preferred Obama over the presumptive Republican John McCain by three percentage points. By May, McCain enjoyed an eight-point lead among white women.

What's dangerous for the Democratic Party is that, for many women, the eye of the storm has moved beyond Hillary or anything she does at this point. The offense has turned personal.

They are now in their own orbit, having abandoned popular Democratic Websites that reveled in crude anti-Hillary outpourings -- and established new ones on which they trade stories of the Obama people's nastiness.

But worse than the online malice has been the affronts to their faces.

Tara Wooters, a 39-year-old mother from Portland, Ore., told me that wearing a Hillary sticker around town has become an act of defiance. She recalls one young man telling her, "I'd rather vote for a black man than a menopausal woman."

"We don't hurl insulting, berating remarks at Obama supporters, or at Obama himself or his family," Debbie Head, a 40-year-old from Austin, Texas, complained to me.

Remember Peggy Agar? The women do. They can't stop talking about the Detroit TV reporter who asked Obama a serious question at a Chrysler factory -- "How are you going to help American autoworkers?" -- to which he answered, "Hold on a second, sweetie."

The women are angry at the ludicrous charges of racism leveled against Clinton by the Obama camp -- amplified in the supposedly respectable media -- and projected onto themselves.

Jean B. Grillo, an "over 50" writer in lower Manhattan, was pretty straightforward: "I am so tired as a white, ultra-liberal, McGovern-voting, civil-rights marching, anti-war fighting highly educated professional woman who totally supports Hillary Clinton to be attacked and vilified as racist and or dumb."

Shauna Morris, a 44-year-old lawyer from Largo, Fla., told me, "I am upper-middle class, and I still can't stand him -- and it has nothing to do with race, believe me."

The women talk of being taken for granted by a party leadership that never spoke out on some of the outrageous Hillary bashing -- and despite the close race, joined the early rush to crown Obama.

"Many of us feel slighted," said Lynn Eyrich Harvey, 76, from Los Gatos, Calif. "We feel that years of supporting the party is unimportant, that we are to sit down and shut up -- but be sure to vote Democratic in November."

Passions can change, one supposes, but the women I hear from do not see the rampant sexism, particularly toward older women, as isolated gaffes but as a systemic dismissal of them -- an enormous voting bloc that has been reliably Democratic.

"How Obama's campaign has treated Hillary will not be forgotten," Janet Rogers, 55, who runs a Bed and Breakfast in Medina, Ohio, wrote me. "I will vote for McCain if Hillary is not the nominee. My husband and friends all feel the same way."

Indeed. McCain in '08 has suddenly become a more likely prospect.

fharrop@projo.com

Copyright 2008, Creators Syndicate Inc.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0608/10779.html
 

Crank_It_Up

Potential Star
Registered
a lot of white women don't know much about him yet, just what they've heard on WKKK radio. As the general election unfolds, white women won't be able to escape from two facts:

1) that of the two wives, Michelle is much more of the type of woman they would like to become

2) that McCain is much more of a male chauvinist than Obama.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Obama doing better with Women, Passing McCain

<font size="5">New poll:

Obama doing better with women, passing McCain</font ize>


McClatchy Newspapers
By David Lightman
Wednesday, June 11, 2008


WASHINGTON — Barack Obama has picked up substantial support in recent days from a crucial constituency — female voters — but the gains could be fleeting.

A Gallup poll taken last Thursday through Monday, as Hillary Clinton left the race, found Obama beating presumptive Republican nominee John McCain among women 51-38 percent, up from 48-43 percent a week earlier.

More important, he'd opened up a 47-41 percent edge among women over 50, the core of Clinton's support. The previous week, McCain had been ahead among them 46-43 percent. Among all voters, Obama led 48-42 percent.

"In part it's a bump" because the Illinois senator became the presumptive Democratic nominee, said John Pitney, a professor of American politics at Claremont McKenna College in California.

The spike reflects a news drumbeat since last week about Democratic Party unity and the warm words of Clinton, his former rival.

But Obama, who's had trouble winning over female voters throughout the primary season, particularly whites over 50, still faces three hurdles with them:


CLINTON

While the New York senator has been gracious and supportive toward Obama, anger lingers among her supporters.

"There is definitely a period of mourning that ardent Hillary Clinton supporters are going through," said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., a key Clinton adviser.

One of the over-50 crowd's long-standing complaints is that Clinton was subjected to sexism from hostile news media, though Wasserman Schultz suggested that "Senator Obama himself is the solution to that problem" by his behavior going forward.


SECURITY

In 2004, Democratic nominee John Kerry beat President Bush among women by only 51-48 percent, and did worse among married women. Bush's leadership qualities were seen as a key reason.

2004 exit polls found that about one-third of all voters said the most important quality they wanted in a president was strong leadership or clear stands on issues, and Bush beat Kerry among such voters by more than 4 to 1.

McCain also does well on such questions. Pew found last month that 43 percent of those polled thought Obama would be "not tough enough" on foreign policy, while 16 percent gave McCain that label.

The key motivation for this group, said David Redlawsk, a professor of political science at the University of Iowa, could rest on whether women value more Obama's promise of changes in the sluggish economy or McCain's image of strength and leadership.


OBAMA HIMSELF

He remains largely unknown to many voters, men and women, and his favorability numbers have been going down. The Pew Research Center found last month that Obama's unfavorability numbers had climbed substantially — from 33 percent in January to 42 percent in May — and a big reason was his "personal attributes."

McCain's unfavorable numbers were up, too — from 31 percent in January to 45 percent in May — but those were driven more by his political views.

Obama, noted Carroll Doherty, the associate director of the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, endured a primary campaign laced with criticism from Clinton as well as controversy over his former pastor and his own reported labeling of small-town residents as "bitter."

Doherty called the drop in favorability "a pretty serious decline," but also noted that "he and McCain both had rough primary campaigns." The Arizona senator, though, has a long voting record and is a better-known public figure.

McClatchy Newspapers 2008

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/40766.html
 
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