Just one day has passed since the College Republican National Committee released a report detailing the reasons why the GOP lost the under-30 vote in 2012 election. Among other things, the report showed that young voters associated the GOP with words like “closed-minded” and “old-fashioned.” The report also pointed to the “outrageous statements made by errant Republican voices.”
These findings are not dramatically different from the overall post-election autopsy released by the Republican National Committee earlier this year. Unfortunately for Republicans hoping to address voters’ concerns, some members of the party continue to make the same blunders that caused problems in 2012.
Enter Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant, who participated in a Washington Post Live forum with fellow governors Jack Markell of Delaware (a Democrat) and Republican Susana Martinez of New Mexico. The panel focused largely on the U.S. education system, with emphasis on childhood literacy. At one point, the moderator asked the state leaders why the system tended to produce “mediocre” outcomes in areas like reading proficiency.
Governor Bryant chimed in first. “Both parents started working,” he began. “Mom is in the workplace.”
Bryant shifted gears almost immediately, joking that his response would provoke backlash, and commending the advancement of women in the workplace (specifically gesturing to the woman moderating the discussion).









