GOP has a woman problem


After Mitt Romney lost the 2012 presidential election, Republican Party Chairman Reince Priebus commissioned an autopsy to determine what had gone wrong. High on the list: a yawning gender gap. Romney won the votes of most men but lost among female voters by 11 percentage points; among single women, the margin was a daunting 36 points. “Our candidates need to use language that addresses concerns that are on women’s minds in order to let them know we are fighting for them,” the Republican National Committee recommended.

So Priebus must not be terribly happy that the party’s (temporary) front-runner, Donald Trump, said Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly had “blood coming out of her wherever” when she asked him tough questions in this month’s debate.

GOP obstacle

Trump’s boorishness, however, isn’t the GOP’s biggest obstacle on the way to gender parity.

A good chunk of the first GOP debate focused on abortion. In an attempt to appeal to social conservatives, several candidates steered right into what most voters will see as fringe territory.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said he thinks abortion should be illegal even when a pregnancy results from rape or incest, although he said he would support legislation including those exceptions if that was the only way to reduce abortions.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker reaffirmed his view that abortion should be illegal with no exceptions, not even to save a mother’s life. “There are many other alternatives that can also protect the life of that mother,” he said.

And former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said he favored legislation to confer constitutional rights on the unborn, an action that could undo the Roe v. Wade decision.

Polls have consistently found that no more than one-quarter of Americans think abortion should be illegal without any exceptions. A 2012 CNN poll, for example, found that 83 percent of voters believed that abortion should be legal in cases of rape or incest, including 76 percent of Republicans.

The last three GOP presidential candidates – Romney, John McCain and George W. Bush – all campaigned on antiabortion platforms but agreed to those exceptions.

If Rubio, Walker or Huckabee win the nomination – and all three are in the top tier in national polls – Democrats will seize on their hardline positions to widen the gender gap.

Clinton’s strategy

Indeed, Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton has already pounced on GOP antiabortion rhetoric.

“These women that I have fought for, worked for, stood up for may lose the right to exercise a personal choice if certain Republicans were to be successful,” Clinton said last week. “What Marco Rubio said has as much of an impact (as Trump’s comments), and it is deeply troubling.”

In case you missed it, Clinton is running explicitly as a champion of women – a role she shied away from during her first presidential run in 2008.

The one consolation for Republicans is that Clinton hasn’t been able to turn that advantage into a gain in the polls. As NBC’s Chuck Todd has noted, so far this campaign has mostly been an unpopularity contest – on both sides.

Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.