Santa Fe New Mexican

No wonder women are fleeing the GOP

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President Donald Trump and his Republican allies have made it easy for future historians and political scientists to understand how the gender gap exploded under his presidency. The vast majority of African American women (and men) for decades have identified with the Democratic Party, the party of civil rights, women’s rights and social welfare support. However, until the Trump presidency, the GOP had managed to hold onto white women (even Trump won 52 percent of them; by contrast, he got 4 percent of African American women). With Trump in power, the GOP is now tied to a president who has offended, appalled and scared white women, most especially collegeedu­cated white women. This week is a perfect example of why that has happened.

Trump personally is a large part of the problem. The misogynist bully, a know-nothing who rejects science and basic economics, encapsulat­es every quality these women despise. This week has been no different — insulting presidenti­al candidates, heightenin­g conflict with other powers (Iran, China) for the sake of riling up his base, lashing out at law enforcemen­t in venom-filled tweets, playing the tough guy, refusing to recognize any legitimate oversight

role for Congress and, of course, lying up the wazoo about tariffs, which are obviously a tax on American consumers. Now there is an added element. There are the efforts underway in Georgia, Alabama and a slew of other states to essentiall­y outlaw abortion. Georgia’s new law would prohibit abortions after six weeks, before many women know they are pregnant. Beyond that it’s murder under the new state law.

In Alabama, the idea is to deny exceptions for rape or incest precisely so pro-lifers can set up a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade. It may come as a shock to Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, but around the country, anti-abortion forces figure they’ve got their majority to overturn Roe with Justice Brett Kavanaugh and are racing to outdo one another in criminaliz­ing abortion.

The draconian legislatio­n in Alabama (and in states sure to follow its lead), for example, would require a minor who is raped to complete the pregnancy. The no-exceptions abortion ban also would put at risk a doctor who follows his profession­al obligation to spare a woman grievous physical (but not life-threatenin­g) harm and thereby may face a murder charge. If this cruel invasion of women’s autonomy in the most aggressive fashion imaginable isn’t the personific­ation of the war on women, I don’t know what is. (And, of course, these laws won’t stop women from having abortions; they will revive illegal and unsafe abortions, putting women’s health and lives at risk.)

Until Trump, abortion has actually not been a top issue for most voters (even women) because, frankly, voters saw (whether they liked it or not) the Supreme Court preserving Roe. That has all changed with two Trump appointees.

Even women who had been amenable to regulation­s of abortion clinics or to restrictin­g late-term abortions can see how Trump’s GOP has gone off the deep end. (This is why you see support for Roe spike in polls.)

And there you have it — the perfect formula for turning women off the GOP, perhaps permanentl­y. These developmen­ts come after multiple attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, cuts to education spending and the inhumane child separation policies — all intensely unpopular with female voters.

The question is not whether women will abandon the GOP in 2020 but whether they will ever come back. If white women (even just white college-educated women who went for Hillary Clinton narrowly — 51 percent to 44 percent — in 2016) start voting more like nonwhite women, the GOP is toast.

 ??  ?? Jennifer Rubin Washington Post
Jennifer Rubin Washington Post

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