Lodi News-Sentinel

Poll: Women and men disagree on Kavanaugh

- By Stephanie Akin

WASHINGTON — Americans became sharply divided on Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in the days after a woman came forward accusing him of a drunken sexual assault while they were teenagers, according to a nonpartisa­n poll released Wednesday.

The fault line fell along gender. Forty percent of male respondent­s to an Economist/YouGov poll had a somewhat or very favorable opinion of Kavanaugh versus just 26 percent of women.

Both parties must now weigh how to respond to the newest wild card — and the gendered response — in a confirmati­on process that was widely considered a done deal until Christine Blasey Ford detailed her account on Sunday. The poll of 1,500 American adults was conducted Sunday through Tuesday.

Even before Ford came forward, Republican­s had sought to make their nominee appealing to women, presenting him as a father to two young daughters and a mentor to countless female lawyers. That campaign became even more pronounced this week as the new trajectory of the confirmati­on hearings became a litmus test of how much the country has changed in the immediate aftermath of the #MeToo movement and in the decades since Anita Hill.

The poll shows that Republican­s controllin­g the Senate could have more wiggle room with female voters than male. The number of male and female respondent­s who had unfavorabl­e views of Kavanaugh was about equal: 36 percent of men said their opinion was either unfavorabl­e or very unfavorabl­e and 35 percent of women said the same. However, fewer men remained undecided: 24 percent, versus 39 percent of women.

Women had more critical opinions of Kavanaugh’s qualificat­ions. Only 30 percent of women versus 48 percent of men thought Kavanaugh, a U.S. appeals court judge, was qualified to join the Supreme Court. Twenty-nine percent of women, versus 25 percent of men, thought he was unqualifie­d. And 41 percent of women were unsure, versus 27 percent of men.

Fewer women thought the Senate should confirm Kavanaugh.

Twenty-seven percent of female respondent­s said Kavanaugh should be confirmed, versus 44 percent of male respondent­s. Equal numbers of men and women — 34 percent — said he should not be confirmed, and 39 percent of women said they were not sure, versus 22 percent of men.

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