Medicine Hat News

Women voters pivotal in U.S. midterms

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RICHMOND, Va. If the Democrats succeed in breaking through in the U.S. midterm elections Tuesday, it will have a lot to do with women like Callie Rennison.

The Colorado university professor has always voted, but the jarring sight of Donald Trump in the White House in 2016 forced her to confront what she called a difficult reality: the United States was not the country she thought it was, and she was determined to change it.

“It is not an understate­ment that I was devastated that on average, the country I love continues to view women as second-class citizens,” Rennison said in an email as she described her transforma­tion into a political activist — donating to Democrats, canvassing for candidates and encouragin­g women to run for office.

“Until women have at least 50 per cent of the power in this nation, we will not be treated as equals. As I’ve told others, ‘Living good quietly is no longer enough’.”

As Americans head to the polls Tuesday for congressio­nal and state elections at the midpoint of Trump’s first term as president, there are women at the other end of the spectrum, too — and they are also poised to play a key role, even if they might not be as willing to talk about it.

“I really appreciate what Trump has done. He is so different; he really doesn’t come into a box,” Barbara, a 72-year-old born-and-raised Virginia mother who supported the president in 2016, said Monday as she paused outside a suburban Richmond shopping plaza.

For Barbara — “I’m not going to tell you my last name,” she insisted — the president’s hardline rhetoric on immigratio­n absolves him of a multitude of sins, including some of his most jarring remarks about women.

“There are a lot of things I don’t like, but I am strongly in favour of not letting people cross our borders. That’s why he’s our president — that’s his No. 1 job, is to not let people into the United States.”

It’s the media, she added, that has stirred up anger and resentment in the American electorate. That, and the president’s penchant for saying things that make headlines.

“I don’t think he has been given enough credit for all of the good things that he has done; he has done a lot of good things. If he could keep his mouth shut, that would be an asset,” she said. “We have a lot of media that they only report the bad, and that keeps everybody and the pot stirred up.”

Polls suggest Democrats are poised to retake control of the House of Representa­tives, where they need to gain 23 seats to form a majority. In the Senate, where terms are six years compared to just two in the House, fewer seats are up for grabs, and those that are make a flip there less likely.

Outside a nearby yoga studio where suburban moms were gathering for a workout, another name came up: Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, whose confirmati­on hearings were marked by allegation­s of high-school sexual assault that Republican­s have dismissed as a Democratic smear job.

“I used to be a moderate fiscal conservati­ve and a social moderate, but I didn’t like the way the whole Kavanaugh thing went down — I thought it was dirty,” said one woman, a yoga mat slung over her shoulder, as she rushed to her class. “I did not like the way the confirmati­on hearings went, and for that reason I feel like I have to support the Republican party.”

That’s a sentiment that leaves Rachel Sklar, a Canadian expatriate lawyer and author living in Manhattan who dedicates her time to advancing feminist political causes, with a sick feeling in her stomach — a sensation that much like the one she felt as the results of the presidenti­al election were trickling in two years ago.

 ?? AP PHOTO MARK HUMPHREY ?? President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd as he leaves a rally Sunday in Chattanoog­a, Tenn. With voter turnout in the U.S. expected to test record levels Tuesday, women are expected to vote in the midterm elections en masse, energized by widespread anger towards Donald Trump.
AP PHOTO MARK HUMPHREY President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd as he leaves a rally Sunday in Chattanoog­a, Tenn. With voter turnout in the U.S. expected to test record levels Tuesday, women are expected to vote in the midterm elections en masse, energized by widespread anger towards Donald Trump.

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