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Susan Estrich
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The Male Vote

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California has never had a woman governor. Two women senators, yes, but never a governor, never a lieutenant governor, never even an attorney general. When it comes to executive power, we're talking men here.

If you had asked me a year ago, or even six months ago, I would've said that this might be the year, that Meg Whitman just might do what Dianne Feinstein and Kathleen Brown and Jane Harman couldn't. You know, the old argument that a moderate Republican woman could be the one who would appeal not only to Republican voters, who tend to be more male, but also to independent and even Democratic women, who care about smashing glass ceilings.

It's not happening, and it's not for want of trying. The latest flap in a campaign that has been full of them — someone's use of a word that rhymes with "bore" (family newspapers and all) to describe Whitman — was seized upon by her women supporters in an effort to label her opponent, Jerry Brown, a sexist. The National Organization for Women (which supports Brown) nonetheless got in on the act, demanding a better apology. Someone even managed to find and release a 15-year-old tape of Brown questioning the efficacy of mammograms (with me sitting next to him, no less, on "Firing Line") in an effort to create a storm around gender. The storm fizzled.

Looking at the latest Rasmussen Reports poll of California voters, from just a few days ago, there's a gender gap, all right. But it isn't helping Whitman one bit. Among men, she and Brown are running even — at about 45 percent. Among women, she's getting clobbered — 51 percent to 39 percent.

The obvious explanation is that women are more likely to be Democrats, which is certainly true. But the interesting comparison comes when you look at the Rasmussen polls in the senate race.

That race pits two women against each other — incumbent Sen.

Barbara Boxer and Carly Fiorina. It's hard to make gender an issue when the two candidates are of the same sex. The closest this race has come to "women's issues" was when Fiorina attacked Boxer's hair.

What's notable is not the comparison of how Whitman and Fiorina are doing among women. Both are getting creamed by almost identical margins (52 percent to 39 percent in Fiorina's case). What's remarkable is how they're doing among men. Fiorina is faring much better: She has a 10-point lead over Boxer.

What gives? Why are men higher on Fiorina than on Whitman? Or perhaps more accurately, why are they so much more likely to support Brown than Boxer?

The real gender gap in California seems to be that men prefer male candidates to female candidates.

You'd be hard-pressed to convince me that Fiorina is a "better" candidate than Whitman. The business people I talk to rate Whitman much higher. She's certainly richer and has spent more money on her campaign, which is an issue. But having and spending more money usually helps and rarely hurts. In person, Whitman comes across well; Fiorina, less so.

So what's going on with the guys? It certainly appears that, given the choice, they choose testosterone in disproportionate numbers. Could it be that there are still subtle — or not so subtle — prejudices about a woman's ability to do the top executive job even when the woman in question is a former and very successful CEO?

Democrats have long had trouble with the male vote, instead counting on women voters to succeed. The conventional wisdom in many women's circles has always been that the "ideal" woman candidate (speaking pragmatically) would be a Republican. Maybe that's not so at all. Maybe what a male Democrat needs most is a woman to run against. In California, at least, gender seems to still matter, just not in the way many expected.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
It's Califonia, the state of all the liberal clowns. If Nancy Pelosi ran for Govenor she would be a sure winner. Policy doesn't matter in that state, it's ideology. I don't understand why Whitman, definitely Governor material , would want the job - the state is doomed.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Early
Wed Oct 20, 2010 5:04 AM
After the reign of Janet Reno (Waco, Teamsters) I heard discussions about women in power. The men said that women are not taught or conditioned culturally to negotiate or moderate. Women are authoritarian. Women in power are Mothers. Men learn early that taking a hard line or shaking a finger and saying "my way or the highway" is an invitation to escalation of hostililty.
Comment: #2
Posted by: xtra
Wed Oct 20, 2010 9:04 AM
The suggestion that women are not taught or conditioned to negotiate or moderate, but are instead authoritarian, is the latest in the absolutely ridiculously stupid assertions I have heard put forward. Men do not learn early that taking a hard line or saying 'my way or the highway' any more often than women because these traits are universally foolish, not gender based. I have had plenty of experience dealing with such tactics from both men and women, probably because they relate more to personality type than any sort of upbringing and certainly not gender at all. The fact is, unless men lead with certain anatomically private qualities, there is NO difference in my experience based on gender in leadership qualities or intellect... and certainly, if the ability of men to think a certain way, lead, organize, negotiate, etc. is based on that anatomy... well, I'd rather they were thinking with their brains anyway ;-)
Comment: #3
Posted by: Mel Maryland
Wed Oct 20, 2010 10:12 AM
Re: xtra - interesting idea. Kind of like how everyone's advice to a new groom is that "The wife is ALWAYS right." Of course, that's a grand generalization meant to be more amusing than truthful. I have to think that most people in power like to use the "my way or highway" route. As a misogynistic society, we just like it less when a women uses that tone than a man.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Nathan H.
Wed Oct 20, 2010 10:19 AM
Maybe the voters should take a close look at Germany where a woman is in charge and her party is Pro-Business. They only have 84 million citizens and yet led the world in exports for three years running, now their growth rate in jobs has lots of Americans heading to Germany - reverse brain drain. Yet this woman was not a business person at all, she fought communism and survive, survived the disgrace of her party by Helmut Kohl and the people support her policies. Or maybe California figures the big earth quake is coming soon and want Jerry Brown to go down for the last count.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Gene44
Wed Oct 20, 2010 11:44 AM
"misosynistic!" WOW!
Comment: #6
Posted by: Early
Thu Oct 21, 2010 5:50 AM
I'm so tired of the political establishment of always finding ways to separate people. Both parties do it, but the Democrats are especially prone to find ways to divide Americans (i.e. black vs. white, white vs. brown, rich vs. poor, man vs. woman, single mothers vs. married mothers, etc.)

I might believe that some men would lean towards a male candidate for the the Presidency only because the President heads our military. But for Governor? I don't think so.

Why would males lean towards choosing Brown and not Boxer? For anybody who has listened to Boxer talk (her last debate against Fiorina for example) and/or has looked at the legislation she has supported, it's quite clear she has got to go. Brown and Boxer appear to be terrible candidates, it's just that Boxer has removed all doubt.
Comment: #7
Posted by: E Ortiz
Thu Oct 21, 2010 2:28 PM
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