2012年10月01日
More women voters backing Obama
More women voters backing Obama
Women voters in a dozen key swing states have propelled President Obama into a sizable lead in the 2012 contest a surge that is likely fueled in part by a heated public debate over contraception coverage.
According to a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll, Obama has a lead of 51% to 42% over Republican front-runner Mitt Romney. This figure is up from last month when Obama was behind Romney by two percentage points.
The biggest bump came from women under 50, according to the poll, among whom Romney favorability shrinks to 30%. we seeing as young women is this galvanizing moment. week during a panel at the 92nd Street Y in New York and a similar Feminist Majority Foundation forum at the Capital Hilton Hotel in Washington on Thursday, politically active women expressed concern about what they see as an election year backlash against such women issues as contraception.
astonishingly frequently older men who think they know what best for women, Matson said.
The culture wars were sparked anew earlier this year when the Obama administration announced that employees of religious institutions seeking contraception would receive mandatory insurance coverage.
Heated congressional debate soon followed.
Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill most of them women railed against a Republican-led, all-male panel on the issue. Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh waded into the fray and called Georgetown law student and birth control activist Sandra Fluke a and for speaking out about the issue during an unofficial Democrat-led committee hearing.
Some female political activists point to Limbaugh comments, along with uproar over a Virginia measure that would have required women to have a vaginal ultrasound before getting an abortion and backlash over Romney comments about eliminating federal funding to Planned Parenthood as proof that women reproductive rights are under attack.
Women at both panels last week also discussed the need for women to get more involved in politics. Women are more likely to vote Democratic, but the divide in the USA Today/Gallup Poll reflects a deeper schism, political experts say.
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Women voters in a dozen key swing states have propelled President Obama into a sizable lead in the 2012 contest a surge that is likely fueled in part by a heated public debate over contraception coverage.
According to a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll, Obama has a lead of 51% to 42% over Republican front-runner Mitt Romney. This figure is up from last month when Obama was behind Romney by two percentage points.
The biggest bump came from women under 50, according to the poll, among whom Romney favorability shrinks to 30%. we seeing as young women is this galvanizing moment. week during a panel at the 92nd Street Y in New York and a similar Feminist Majority Foundation forum at the Capital Hilton Hotel in Washington on Thursday, politically active women expressed concern about what they see as an election year backlash against such women issues as contraception.
astonishingly frequently older men who think they know what best for women, Matson said.
The culture wars were sparked anew earlier this year when the Obama administration announced that employees of religious institutions seeking contraception would receive mandatory insurance coverage.
Heated congressional debate soon followed.
Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill most of them women railed against a Republican-led, all-male panel on the issue. Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh waded into the fray and called Georgetown law student and birth control activist Sandra Fluke a and for speaking out about the issue during an unofficial Democrat-led committee hearing.
Some female political activists point to Limbaugh comments, along with uproar over a Virginia measure that would have required women to have a vaginal ultrasound before getting an abortion and backlash over Romney comments about eliminating federal funding to Planned Parenthood as proof that women reproductive rights are under attack.
Women at both panels last week also discussed the need for women to get more involved in politics. Women are more likely to vote Democratic, but the divide in the USA Today/Gallup Poll reflects a deeper schism, political experts say.
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