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View Full Version : Republicans losing everywhere.



Steve Savicki
10-25-2006, 12:26 PM
http://www.yahoo.com/s/277421

I haven't noticed what the Repubs have done that's so beneficial to the Hispanic communities.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20061025/pl_afp/usvotewomen_061025134949
Women voters, notably married moms, are turning away from the ruling Republican Party in the run-up to US legislative elections due, in part, to dissatisfaction with the
Iraq war and domestic issues.

Polls and analysts say that unlike the 2002 and 2004 elections, when terrorism concerns and other security-related issues drove many women to support
President George W. Bush and his Republican Party, these factors are no longer playing a key role.

"Women voters are turning more Democratic now than they were four years ago," Carroll Doherty, associate director of the Pew Research Center in Washington, told AFP. "Four years ago Republicans were running about even with Democrats among women, but now you see a big gain for the Democrats among women."

A poll conducted by the Pew Center in early October had 55 percent of women voters expressing support for the Democratic Party as opposed to 34 percent for the Republican Party.

"Women are very down on the Iraq war and their view of the president is also eroding," Doherty said. "Men are still pretty divided over the president but women disapprove of him two to one."

For Bush, who has prided himself in saying that his middle initial stands for women, the slipping support could spell trouble on election day as his party seeks to hang on to its majority in Congress and grapples with a series of corruption and ethics scandals.

Carrie Luka, vice president of the Independent Women's Forum, a conservative advocacy group in Washington, said she believes women may snub the Republicans on November 7 largely out of a sense of disappointment rather than to endorse Democratic policies.

"This election has become more of a referendum on the administration or on Congress itself and that definitely has the Republicans nervous," Luka told AFP. "The stories of corruption have made some women less likely to pull the Republican lever this time around."

But she warned that women considering voting for a change should think hard about the alternative.

"Even though a lot of people are sick of the Republican leadership ... they need to remember that they aren't really looking forward to a democratically controlled Congress either," Luka said.

Analysts, however, point out that the Democratic Party traditionally has fared better with women when it comes to domestic issues and they say that dissatisfaction with the Iraq war and terrorism-related issues could play in the party's favour come election day.

"The swing voters are usually women, and they care about domestic issues like health care, education, environment, and those are better issues for the Democrats," said James Thurber, director of the Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies at American University in Washington.

Page Gardner, president of Women's Voices Women Vote, a non-partisan organization, said the impact of women on US elections is enormous, especially when it comes to single women who are the fastest growing demographic in the country.

She said her group was particularly focusing during the current campaign on the 20 million unmarried women who failed to cast a ballot in 2004.

"The women's vote is so important in this country because they are the majority of voters," Gardner said. "So women have the power to decide elections."

Wawazat
10-25-2006, 04:24 PM
http://www.emmadavies.net/fairy/default.aspx?firstname=Steve&lastname=Savicki&submit=Find+My+Fairy+Name#form