Last Updated: October 10, 2008
View this Site: Color B/W       Feeds: RSS
PewResearchCenter Publications
Receive Our Email Newsletter:
Site Search:
Email Newsletter
Sign up to receive the Center's weekly newsletter:

Site Search
Search the sites of the Pew Research projects:

RSS Feeds
Get the PewResearch.org RSS feed, or jump to feeds from individual projects:
RSS Feed pewresearch.org feeds
Pew Research Center for the People & the PressPew Research Center for the People & the Press

Mind the Gender Gap

PrintEmailShare

A lot of attention has been paid to the women's vote in the first two Democratic nominating contests. In the Iowa caucuses, Barack Obama won a narrow victory over Hillary Clinton among female voters. But in New Hampshire women rallied to the former first lady giving her a huge 46 percent to 34 percent margin, which was the deciding factor in her comeback win.

Figure

In contrast, the voting preferences of men have not drawn as much attention, perhaps because men voted the same way in both states: a strong plurality of men backed Obama. According to the Edison/Mitofsky entrance polls in Iowa, 35 percent of male caucus-goers supported Senator Obama, compared with 23 percent who backed Senator Clinton. In the New Hampshire primary, Senator Obama carried the male vote by a similarly large 40 percent to 29 percent margin, despite his narrow defeat there.

What's going on here? Does Senator Clinton have a problem with male voters or does Senator Obama simply appeal more to men? A look at the exit polls and latest national polls suggests that the answer is a little bit of both, but the anti-Clinton sentiment is a somewhat larger factor among men. In particular, Hillary Clinton seems to turn off younger and moderate to conservative male Democrats. As many as one-in-five of them say there is no way they will support the former first lady for the nomination.

Read the full commentary at nytimes.com.