As President Biden made his final pitch to voters before the midterms at a rally in Maryland Monday night, the early voting tally had already reached 44 million. Today, the rest of the nation casts their ballots in the midterm elections that will decide who controls the House and Senate, as well as 36 governorships.
Among the most influential groups of voters this cycle are women, who turned out in a show of force in 2020. However a recent WSJ poll showed that white suburban women – a key group of midterm voters – have shifted support from Democrats to Republicans in the last days of midterm campaigning due to concerns about inflation and the economy.
The survey, conducted in October, included almost 300 suburban white women and saw a 15 point shift favoring GOP candidates in congressional races. A previous August poll by the Journal indicated white suburban women preferred Democrats by 12 percentage points.
All In Together CEO Lauren Leader and Political strategist and pollster Frank Luntz joined “Morning Joe” on Tuesday to discuss the electoral power of women voters and what the latest polls might mean for the future of both parties.
“I think we’re going to see some record numbers,” Leader told “Morning Joe” hosts Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski and Willie Geist on women heading to the polls. “There was concern earlier that maybe they wouldn’t be as high as some of the record turnout elections, [but] I think this is an election people are paying attention to.”









