As the midterms creep closer, the GOP is aggressively campaigning to win women’s votes.
The GOP has struggled to shake “war on women” criticisms for years; in their 2012 autopsy report, they concluded they needed to better combat Democrats’ narrative, be more inclusive, and recruit more women.
This week, Republicans launched four different efforts to convince women they’ve achieved those goals — even as polls and data show mixed results at best — signaling just how important the female voter has become in their midterm strategy.
On Thursday, Republican National Committee co-chair Sharon Day published a column on BlogHer, arguing that Democrats are objectifying women when they appeal to them on issues like abortion and attacking Cosmopolitan magazine for writing about reproductive rights in their election coverage, while refusing to endorse candidates that weren’t pro-choice.
“We don’t need Cosmo to do the same thing the Democrat political operatives do and stereotype women as a voting bloc that doesn’t care about the economy, national debt, immigration, or foreign policy,” Day wrote. “I was also disappointed when Cosmo said they won’t endorse any candidate who doesn’t meet their litmus test on abortion. Again, they are perpetuating the stereotype that women only care about a narrow set of ‘women’s issues’ and have only one opinion on them.”
RNC chairman Kirsten Kukowski said of these initiatives in an email late Thursday that party sought to “correct the record” on the Democrats’ “campaign to mislead voters.” She added that the party was also working on a lot of get-out-the-vote efforts with women. “We’ve been making a concerted effort all cycle,” she said.
Day’s column came on the heels of a web video “Women of the GOP” posted Wednesday. The RNC-produced video flashes soft focus images of female Republican candidates up for election this November set to motivational music, overlaid with words like “empowerment” and “motivate.”
“This year, Republican women are taking back the future,” the female narrator says in the spot.
The GOP does have a number of high-profile female candidates on the ballot this November–Iowa’s Joni Ernst and Oregon’s Monica Wehby for instance–but they’re far behind the Democratic party when it comes to recruiting, running, and electing women to office. The GOP trails far behind Democrats with the number of women they elect to state legislatures and Congress.
In November, two times as many women will be on the ballot as Democrats than Republicans, according to Rutger’s Center for Women in Politics.
Related: Gender gap damages GOP: Where are all the Republican women?
“They’re losing women voters and they can’t lose women voters by the percentages they’re losing them and win elections,” EMILY’s List president Stephanie Schriock told msnbc. “Now they’re realizing it.”
She said the GOP is appealing to women “even though they haven’t changed their policies.”









