Modifier article
Dashboards
Modifier article
Modifier article
Informations
Article *
Niveau *
Selectionner le niveau
PREINTERMEDIATE
INTERMEDIATE
ADVANCED
Editeur
Thème *
Sélectionnez une catégorie
Art & Culture
Business & Economy
Environment
Health
Lifestyle
Politics
Science & technology
Society
Sport
Travel
Mois du newsletter *
Séléctionner
January 2022
February 2022
March 2022
April 2022
May 2022
June 2022
July 2022
testpzzz
September 2022
October 2022
November 2022
December 2022
Jan 2023
Feb 2023
March 2023
April 2023
May 2023
June 2023
July 2023
September 2023
October 2023
November 2023
December 2023
January 2024
Feb2024
March 2024
April 2024
May 2024
June 2024
July 2024
September 2024
October 2024
November 2024
December 2024
January 2025
February 2025
March 2025
April 2025
May2025
June 2025
July 2025
September 2025
October 2025
November 2025
December 2025
Journaliste
Origine
Fichier vidéos
Texte
Preliminary exit polling shows Harris won women, but in smaller numbers than her Democratic predecessors Gender had promised to be one of the biggest stories of the 2024 election. With abortion one of voters’ top issues, Donald Trump’s well-documented history of misogyny and a female presidential candidate of color on the ballot, Democrats banked on women showing up in force to defeat him. But Trump’s stunning victory in both the electoral college and the popular vote dashed those hopes – and scrambled the narrative around how gender, race and other markers of identity informed Americans’ votes. Based on available exit polling, which remains preliminary, here are five early takeaways on how gender shaped the 2024 elections. 1. Women voted for the Democratic candidate, but by smaller margins Women did indeed show up to support Kamala Harris, but in smaller numbers than her Democratic predecessors. While Hillary Clinton won women by 13 points in 2016 and Joe Biden by 15 in 2020, Harris secured them by just 10 points, CNN found. 2. White women are still voting for the Republican candidate Although women as a whole have historically voted for Democrats, white women have not. Instead, over the last 72 years, a plurality of white women have voted for the Democratic candidate only twice, in 1964 and 1996. On Tuesday, they once again went for Trump – just as they did in 2016 and 2020. But Harris made inroads with the group; she lost them by only 5 points, according to CNN. (In 2020, they broke for Trump by 11.) More surprisingly, Trump’s lead among white men also shrank, from 23 points in 2020 to 20 in 2024. 3. Trump did better with young women than he did in 2020 The Trump campaign leaned into targeting young men, as the former president publicly palled around with male YouTubers and podcasters, such as Joe Rogan, who make little space for women. This effort paid off: exit polling indicates that there was a canyon-wide 16-point gender gap between young men and women, which is an increase from 2020. While women between the ages of 18 and 29 preferred Harris 58% to 40%, their male peers chose Trump 56% to 42%. However, compared to his last run, Trump did better with both young men (41% of them voted for him four years ago) and young women (33% in 2020). 4. Harris suffered significant losses among both Latino women and men Latino men, in particular, veered hard to the right. In 2016, Clinton won Latino men by 31 points; by 2020, their support for Democrats had cooled somewhat, as Biden won them by 23 points. On Tuesday, Trump won this group handily, by 10 points, according to exit polling performed for the Washington Post and other outlets. Meanwhile, Harris won Latina women by 24 points, a victory that pales in comparison to Clinton’s 44-point lead in 2024. 5. Black women are the most reliable Democratic voters Long the Democrats’ most stalwart supporters, Black women are still the backbone of the Democratic party. Harris won them by 85 points – a bigger lead than any other gendered and racial group measured by CNN. Apart from the contest for president, Delaware and Maryland both elected Black women, Lisa Blunt Rochester and Angela Alsobrooks, to the Senate – making the next Senate the first one in which two Black women will simultaneously serve together.
Date
Enregistrer
Annuler