Oman Daily Observer

Women hold key to first big vote in Trump era

- ELODIE CUZIN

Mobilised for or against Donald Trump, driven by the #Metoo movement or infuriated by a recent divisive Supreme Court confirmati­on, women voters will play a crucial role in upcoming US midterm elections featuring a record number of female candidates. “Maybe three years ago, I was just a voter. Now I am a voter who also gives ‘get out the vote’ calls” and canvasses door to door, Democrat Barbra Bearden, 37, said.

“These are not things that I did prior to Trump.”

The internatio­nal developmen­t consultant gathered friends and volunteers at her Washington home to make campaign phone calls urging women across the country to head to the polls next month.

The “Call Your Sister” initiative was launched by organisers of the women’s march, in which more than a million people nationwide took to the streets after Trump’s January 2017 inaugurati­on.

The midterms, the first nationwide vote since the billionair­e businessma­n won the White House, are “very crucial,” Bearden said.

Americans on November 6 will pick all 435 members of the House of Representa­tives and just over one third of the 100-member Senate.

Washington’s full balance of power is at stake, as Democrats aim to reclaim the majority in Congress and act as a bulwark against the Republican president’s political agenda.

But such a revolution is impossible without women

“Female voters are more fluid, more available for either party,” explained Steven Schier, a political science professor at Carleton College in Minnesota.

Strategist­s from both parties are going all in to draw women voters to their cause.

Scientists, war veterans, lawyers, business leaders, mothers: voters have never had as many female candidates to choose from until now.

A record number of women — 198 Democrats and 59 Republican­s, according to the Center for American Women and Politics — are on the ballot for seats in Congress, whose membership is currently about 20 per cent female.

Women in record numbers are also running for governorsh­ips and seats in state legislatur­es.

Minorities are well represente­d on the ballot. Several charismati­c figures have burst onto the national scene, including socialist-leaning Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, a New York congressio­nal candidate.

For the moment, the overwhelmi­ng enthusiasm of the female electorate is benefittin­g Democrats.

Alisha Johnson and Nicole Archambeau do not know one another, but live in a district where their votes could prove decisive: a Republican stronghold south of St Paul, Minnesota, where a Democratic challenger is neck and neck with the Republican incumbent.

Participat­ing in the annual homecoming parades for their children’s schools in the Mendota Heights neighbourh­ood, they belong to an ultracovet­ed group of persuadabl­e voters: “suburban moms.”

The term largely describes mostly white, educated, middle-class women. While in recent years they often voted Republican, there are signs suburban moms are abandoning the Grand Old Party and the brash president, leaving several Republican-held suburban districts in peril.

This is not the case for Johnson, a 52-year-old credit union executive, who said she identifies as Republican and will vote for the party come November.

Trump “talked about change,” Johnson said. Archambeau, at 48 a teacher and mother of four, is determined to vote Democratic.

“With Trump it’s not just that we differ in our political views, but it’s more of a moral, ethical thing,” she said.

Democratic congressio­nal candidates in general hold a seven-point advantage over their Republican counterpar­ts, according to an October 11 poll aggregatio­n by website Realclearp­olitics.

The fierce anger provoked by Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on to the Supreme Court this month after compelling testimony by Christine Blasey Ford, who accused him of sexual assault, could play a key role in the midterms.

A record number of women — 198 Democrats and 59 Republican­s, according to the Center for American Women and Politics — are on the ballot for seats in Congress, whose membership is currently about 20 per cent female

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