September 15, 2011

The Security Sex

By Selwyn Duke
We have all heard about the sex gap in voting patterns.  This is the phenomenon whereby, in every election, women are far more likely to support liberal candidates than men are.  For instance, in 1996, Bill Clinton captured 54 percent of the women's vote but only 43 percent of the men's.  And in subsequent elections, the male-female gap has been as follows: in 2000, Al Gore, 42-54; in 2004, John Kerry, 41-51; and in 2008, Barack Obama, 49-56.  In fact, even in the watershed election of 2010, during which we heard about the rise of the conservative woman, the fairer sex favored Democrats by 1 point, 49 to 48.  The Republican victories were attributable to a sex gap (I don't use the word "gender") that was as wide as ever, ranging from 4 to 19 points. So, clearly, women tend to gravitate toward statist candidates.  And there are many reasons for this.  One is that, being the more emotion-driven sex, women are more susceptible to liberals' emotional appeals.  Another is.... (Read Full Article)

COMMENTS ON AMERICANTHINKER

AMERICAN THINKER FACEBOOK ACTIVITY

FOLLOW US ON