November 9th, 2008

Political Notebook: Unmarried women give support to Martin, Obama

By Camie Young

Read the original article at The Gwinnett Daily Post.

A research group is attributing U.S. senate candidate Jim Martin's strong showing on Tuesday to support from unmarried women.

The survey, conducted by Lake Research Partners and commissioned by Women's Voices. Women Vote, said it was that group that helped Martin get enough votes to force incumbent Saxby Chambliss into a runoff.

"Georgia prepares for a runoff election because of the support Martin received from unmarried women," said Page Gardner, founder and president of Women's Voices. Women Vote. "For Martin, getting unmarried women out to vote in the runoff election is the key to winning this seat."

The survey found 71 percent of unmarried women supported the Democrat, giving him a 49 point spread with Chambliss. They also supported Barack Obama by 42 points, a release said. That followed a national trend, according to surveys conducted in New Hampshire, North Carolina and Minnesota.

The results also showed that 55 percent of married women supported John McCain for president and Chambliss over Martin by a 7-point spread.

Nationally, the results showed that unmarried women gave Obama a bigger victory margin than those of young voters and Latino voters, favoring him 70 percent to 29 percent, while married women preferred McCain 50 percent to 47 percent.

"Throughout this election season, we've seen unmarried women paying attention to the candidates, and last night we saw them turn out to make their voices heard," Gardner said. "Unmarried women are the fastest-growing large demographic in the country, and during this election, we've seen them register and vote in record numbers."

The biggest issues for women centered on concerns over the economy, pollsters found, with 16 percent citing rising health care costs; 13 percent, the budge deficit; 11 percent, job loss; 10 percent concerned about the availability of family-supporting jobs; 10 percent worried about higher taxes and 10 percent about daily expenses such as food or child care.

WVWV News
15 Aug 11 | 18:38

 

Debt limit and downgrade take a toll on both parties; GOP bears the brunt of voters’ anger

Debt limit and downgrade take a toll on both parties; GOP bears the brunt of voters’ anger

 

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03 Jun 11 | 11:21

The poll released today covers How to Talk About the Economy with the Rising American Electorate  (RAE).

 

From the report: "RAE voters are an indispensible part of the progressive base in this country.  Political outcomes are driven both by their electoral choices and their relative participation in this Democracy.  The 2010 election cycle saw a significant withdrawal from the Democrats among some members of the RAE, mostly because the economic change they voted for in 2008 was slow in coming and progressive messaging often failed to reflect their economic reality.  Progressives’ success depends in large measure on correcting this mistake in 2012."

 

For more, view the poll results (pdf).
View the full memo here (pdf).

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