GENDER, feminism, the 2016 Presidential Election and beyond

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Presentation transcript:

GENDER, feminism, the 2016 Presidential Election and beyond Leonie Huddy Department of Political Science

candidate gender salient in 2016

women were expected to support Hillary Clinton: the gender gap

Large gender gap in 2016 Large gender gap in 2016 The Gender Gap (% women voting for Dem -% men voting for Dem) = 13 pts. Fewer men voted for Clinton than Obama; but the election outcome is not historically unprecedented Raises questions about normalcy or extraordinariness of 2016

Placing gender in political context: Women are not a unified voting bloc Gendered loyalties are complex Men and women are highly interdependent, making gender a complex social category politically Partisanship and vote choice are not simply grounded in gender Many men are Democrats and many women are Republicans There is a gender gap in partisanship but it is relatively modest in size (6-12 % points in recent presidential elections)

The Feminist gap Feminist gendered ideology There is no widely accepted version of this concept. Typically measured by some mix of the following items: Equal gender roles Perceived inequality Feelings toward feminists An emotional bond with women Have some of the best measurement in the 2012 ANES 2012 ANES F2F (N=2,054) and internet (N=3,860) Large oversamples of blacks and Latinos in both samples

Feminist Ideology in 2012: 4 components 2012 American National Election Studies F2F (N=2,054) and internet (N=3,860) Large oversamples of blacks and Latinos in both samples Feminist Identity and Antipathy (1 item) Feeling thermometer rating of feminists (good distribution) Perceived Discrimination Against Women (4 items) How serious a problem is discrimination against women in the United States? (modern sexism) Gender Resentment (2 items) When women demand equality these days, how often are they actually seeking special favors? (from modern sexism) Importance of Female Political Representation (2 items) How important is it to you that a woman is or is not elected President of the United States? Measurement Model: The four factors are distinct but form a strong common factor The structure is invariant across age, race, gender and interview mode

Structure of Feminist Ideology

Distribution of Feminist Ideology by Gender (Kernel density plot) 0-1 scale overall; created by additively combining all four component scales (which are created in turn by additively combining their items) Modest gender gap Marked diversity among both women and men

Determinants of Feminist Ideology Men Women Traditional Beliefs Women's Roles (non-traditional) 0.05 (0.02) * 0.02 Traditional Moral Values -0.18 ** -0.13 Religious Attendance 0.01 (0.01) 0.00 Political Orientation Conservative-Liberal Ideology 0.14 0.16 Personality Factors Authoritarian -0.02 -0.01 Open to Experience 0.09 Agreeable 0.08 Education   0.04 N 2581 2724 R2 0.31 0.32

Feminism by Openness to Experience This is drawn form an equation in which political ideology, traditional morality, and beliefs about the size of government are controlled.

Polarization Gender (female: feminism=0) -0.11 (0.05) * Ideology Strong Government 0.36 (0.02) ** Traditional Moral Values -0.26 (0.03) Religious Attendance -0.04 Conservative-Liberal Ideology 0.67 (0.04) Group-Based Attitudes Racial Resentment (Non-Black) -0.15 Black X Resentment 0.18 (0.09) Feminism (among men) 0.29 (0.07) Female X Feminism N 5273 R2 .56 Effects of Feminist Ideology on Partisan Polarization=Dems-Reps (-1 to +1) Entries are regression coefficients with standard errors in parentheses. Interaction only occurs for whites, men and women among blacks and Latinos

Marginal Effect of Feminist Beliefs on Partisan Polarization among Men and Women:

The 2016 election outcome Men Women

Bothered by TRUMP’S TREATMENT OF WOMEN? % support for trump

Concluding Thoughts Partisans voted along partisan lines in 2016 Feminism is a large part of that decision The question concerns the additional role played by gender in 2016 Did hostile sexism play an added role and drive support for Trump? Were there heightened effects of feminism (among women and men)? What does this mean for a future female political candidate? Most likely to emerge within the democratic party But may be easier to win if on the political right (decreasing the effects of sexism and snit- feminism)?

Thank you! Leonie.huddy@stonybrook.edu