PLYMOUTH,
N.H. (AP) — In a perfect world, Susan Stepp, a 73-year-old retiree,
would be voting vote for Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren in New
Hampshire’s Democratic presidential primary Tuesday, she says. But that
won’t be happening.
“I
am not sure a woman is the best candidate to go up against Trump,”
Stepp said recently as she stood in the back of a conference room
listening to tech entrepreneur Andrew Yang as part of her hunt for the
best candidate to challenge the Republican incumbent.
Stepp’s concern has coursed through the Democratic primary for months, registering in polling, interviews
and, now, the first votes cast. In Iowa’s caucuses last Monday, many
Democrats did not prioritize breaking the gender barrier to the Oval
Office and they viewed being a woman as a hindrance rather than an
advantage in the race.
Only
about one-third of Iowa caucusgoers backed a female candidate. Topping
the caucus field were two men, former South Bend, Indiana, mayor Pete
Buttigieg and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders,. Women were only slightly
more likely than men to back one of the three women in the race,
according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 3,000 Iowa voters.
Most
Iowa Democrats said it was important for a woman to be president in
their lifetimes. But many voters, including about half of all women,
said a female nominee would have a harder time beating Donald Trump in
November.
“He
will just use that against her, like he did Hillary,” Stepp said,
looking back to Trump’s 2016 race against Hillary Clinton in 2016. “He
doesn’t debate. He just insults. I don’t think he would have that same
effect if he went up against a strong man.” Stepp said she plans to vote
for Sanders.
Those perceptions present an undeniable headwind for the women in the race, who have spent months making the case that a woman can win.
As they seek success in New Hampshire, both Warren and Minnesota Sen.
Amy Klobuchar must work to energize voters about the chance to make
history and persuade them it is possible this year, in this race against
this president.
“In
2020, we can and should have a woman for president,” Warren said at a
CNN town hall this past week, days after taking third in Iowa. Klobuchar
came in fifth. The Associated Press has not called a winner in the Iowa
caucus because the race is too close to call.
Iowans
appeared open to that message. Most Democratic voters in the state,
72%, said they thought it is important for the U.S. to elect a woman
president in their lifetimes, and that included roughly two-thirds of
men.
But most
were resolved to put it off for another election. That was true of men
and women. The survey found 34% of women voted for Warren, Klobuchar or
the longshot candidacy of Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, compared with 28%
of men.
Overall,
many Democratic voters thought it would be harder for a woman to beat
Trump. About half of women said they thought a female nominee would have
a harder time, compared with about 4 in 10 men. Men who harbored that
concern were significantly less likely to vote for a woman than a man.
Experts
say the findings are in line with traditional patterns in voting by
gender — women usually don’t coalesce around one of their own. “Nobody’s
going to win an election by unifying women because women are not a
unified bloc,” said Kathy Dolan, a political scientist at the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. “There’s no evidence that suggests for us that
women candidates vote much more for women candidates than men.”
Analysts
say it’s no surprise that women express more anxiety about a woman
defeating Trump, given that through personal experience, they’re
familiar with the barriers of sexism.
“Women
are more likely to have experienced or observed gender discrimination
or sexism,” said Jill Lawless, a political scientist at the University
of Virginia.
Notably,
experts said, there’s no data showing that women underperform or
outperform men in general elections. But Lawless noted that having to
fight that perception that a woman cannot win may actually work against
the female candidates in this race.
“Anytime
they’re trying to convince voters that a woman can beat Donald Trump,
they’re not talking about health care or foreign affairs,” she said.
Warren
spent months trying to avoid the gender issue, seeing questions about
pervasive sexism in politics as a lose-lose proposition. Either she
acknowledged that being a woman created all kinds of challenges because
of inherent bias, and appeared to be whining about it, or she said it
wasn’t a problem and would therefore seem out of touch, she told aides.
But,
since the New Year, Warren has shifted her strategy dramatically,
taking the issue head on. She raised it directly in asserting that Sanders had suggested a woman couldn’t win the White House, and, after they clashed about it during a debate in Iowa, refused to shake his hand on national television.
In
the final days before Iowa, Warren began talking about a woman’s
electability. She now repeats at every campaign stop that women have
performed better in recent elections than men, underscoring the role of
female candidates who helped Democrats retake control of the House in
2018.
“The
world has changed since 2016,” Warren said during a rally this past week
in Keene, New Hampshire. “Women have been outperforming men in
competitive races. Can women win? You bet women can win.”
Pushpa
Mudan, a 68-year-old retired physician, is one of those anxious women
who’s sticking to her guns. She attended a Warren rally on Wednesday at a
community college in Nashua, New Hampshire.
She
said she’s seen Warren three times in recent months, and also attended a
recent Klobuchar rally, and is still deciding between the two, though
she’ll likely pick Warren in the primary. Mudan said electing a woman as
president is a top issue for her, but she’s afraid that none will be
able to compete with Trump.
“I
think this country, for considering itself an advanced country, is very
far behind the rest of the world by not having a woman at the highest
position,” she said. “Places like Pakistan, Turkey have had a female
president. Not here. But the way Trump puts them down, it is hard for
any to make it, I think. It’s going to be very hard.”
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Associated Press writers Will Weissert and Kathleen Ronayne in Manchester, New Hampshire, contributed to this report.
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