Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A female president? Most say she’s near

- EVIE BLAD

A majority of respondent­s in a nationwide poll commission­ed by two University of Arkansas System groups said they believe they will see a female president within their lifetimes.

Despite some polling data that suggest bias against women among portions of all age and demographi­c groups, 77 percent of men and 80 percent of women polled believe the United States will elect a female president, researcher­s from the University of Arkansas at Fayettevil­le’s Diane D. Blair Center for Southern Politics and Society said.

The computer poll — sponsored in partnershi­p with UA’s Clinton School of Public Service — assembled responses from 3,600 respondent­s randomly selected by polling firm GfK to mimic demographi­c patterns detected in the 2010 Census. The poll, conducted in mid-December, has a margin of error of 2.5 percentage points.

“We didn’t ask if people wanted a female president. We asked if they believed they would see one,” UA assistant professor Pearl Ford-Dowe said after revealing the preliminar­y poll results Wednesday at the Clinton School.

In separate questions, the poll compared support for a frequently mentioned potential Democratic presidenti­al candidate, Hillary Rodham Clinton, with three potential Republican challenger­s for the 2016 election, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

Poll respondent­s, who were not aware of what groups had commission­ed the research, preferred Clinton in all three matchups, the researcher­s said.

“There is strong nation--

wide support for Hillary Clinton,” said UA assistant professor Rafael Jimeno. “If these results hold over the next few years, she will be in a strong position to run for president if she chooses to.”

Blair Center Director Todd Shields said it’s possible there could have been some bias in the poll because respondent­s answered questions soon after the 2012 election.

Poll participan­ts sometimes say they voted for the winner of an election even if they voted for the opponent because people like to support winners, he said. That bias could have affected the likelihood of selecting a Democrat in a poll, he said, because the winner of the 2012 presidenti­al election is a Democrat.

But surveying online provides a stronger sense of anonymity, making respondent­s more likely to answer honestly, Shields said.

Wednesday’s discussion was the first public event centered on the poll results. The Clinton School and the Blair Center plan to roll out several more sets of data analyses over the next year, exploring racial, cultural and economic issues with a special focus on Southern attitudes.

The two campuses spent $75,000 in privately raised funds to commission the poll.

Respondent­s were selected from GfK’s proprietar­y database that features a representa­tive sample of Americans. The polling company outfits participan­ts with portable computers and Internet access, allowing it to draw opinions from “underrepre­sented groups,” such as people without cell phones and people who couldn’t otherwise afford a computer, Shields said.

The Clinton School-Blair Center poll oversample­d from the South — defined as the 11 states that previously made up the Confederac­y — so that researcher­s could further explore attitudes within the region, he said.

“We’re able to talk about attitudes of people in the South with accuracy that no one else has,” Shields said.

That Southern sample was scaled down to more accurately represent the region’s size relative to the rest of the country when researcher­s compiled national results, they said.

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