A year-and-a-half after the Republican National Committee released a comprehensive post-election review calling for greater inclusion, a new report shows the GOP still has work to do with women.
Female voters view the Republican Party as “intolerant,” “lacking in compassion,” and “stuck in the past,” according to an internal report commissioned by the American Action Network and Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS. POLITICO was given exclusive access to the study, entitled “Republicans and Women Voters: Huge Challenges, Real Opportunities.”
Based on research from eight focus groups and a poll of 800 registered female voters, which was conducted by Public Opinion Strategies and Axis Research, the report concluded that Republicans “fail to speak to women in the different circumstances in which they live,” leaving many women “barley receptive” to the GOP’s policies. Forty-nine percent of women view Republicans unfavorably, compared to 39% who view Democrats unfavorably.
RNC Chair Reince Priebus tried to do some damage control on Thursday, telling msnbc host Chuck Todd that neither “party can do a victory lap here.”
“The poll’s gist wasn’t, ‘Oh, the Republicans are stuck in the past,’” he said. “The gist of the poll was, 50% of women are saying they have a negative view of the Republican Party and 40% of the women are saying they have a negative view of the Democratic Party.”
But any way you spin it, the message is clear: Republicans haven’t done enough to close the gender gap that’s plagued their party since the Reagan Administration. And that could spell trouble for their hopes to take over the Senate in November and win the White House in 2016 — especially if Hillary Clinton throws her hat into the ring.
“This is a ‘good news’ story for the Democrats — period,” said Debbie Walsh, director of the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) at Rutgers University. “It becomes even more of an issue if Hillary Clinton is running for president. She will mobilize women to be engaged.”
Alcoholics Anonymous teaches that the first step to recovery is admitting you have a problem. With the gender gap, the GOP can certainly cross that one off the list, having published a comprehensive “autopsy” report last year that prioritized female voters, who chose President Obama over Mitt Romney 56% to 44%.
But if recovering the women’s vote — and in turn, the White House — involves its own 12-step program, it’s steps two through 12 that pose a bit more of a challenge for the GOP.
“They seem to understand the problem, at least on a national level,” said Democratic strategist Maria Cardona, referring to the RNC’s 2012 report. “But they seem to think this problem is simply one of tone and messaging.”
”It goes way beyond,” she continued. “It’s a problem of policy.”
The Crossroads/American Action Network report hinted at that point, at least when it comes to Republican opposition toward pay-equity legislation. In April, the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would (among other provisions) bar retaliation against an employee for inquiring about a coworker’s wages, failed to advance in the Senate. Despite 52 co-sponsors, the measure could not get a single Republican vote.









