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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (40949)3/31/2004 11:37:48 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
GIRLS GONE RILED: WILL SINGLE WOMEN BREAK BUSH'S HEART?

By Arianna Huffington

Trend-conscious candidates beware: Do not get caught courting soccer
moms
or NASCAR dads. They're so over. This year's hot new swing voter is the
single woman.

And with very good reason: Although single women account for one-fifth
of
the U.S. electorate, they historically turn out to vote in much smaller
numbers than married women or, for that matter, married or single men.

The stats are simply stunning: According to Women's Voices, Women Vote
(wvwv.org), a nonpartisan organization dedicated to engaging unmarried
women in the electoral process, 22 million unmarried women didn't vote
in
the last presidential election. If these single women had voted at the
same rate as married women did, 6 million additional votes would have
been
cast. No small matter in a coin-toss election like 2000 was — and like
2004 may be.

So while TV viewers are waving good-bye to the "Sex and the City"
singles,
Roz from "Frasier," and Rachel from "Friends," political strategists
are
ardently wooing their real-life counterparts.

Democrats should be making an especially heavy play for them, since
research shows that single women tend to be more progressive than other
voters. And what's more, they are seriously ticked off: Over two-thirds
of
them believe that the country is moving in the wrong direction and want
real change.

Although it's impossible to pigeonhole a group as diverse as single
women
— they're young and old, encompass all races, and include divorced
moms,
widowed seniors, and never-married Bridget Joneses — there's a reason
they
tend to have the political opinions they do: The vast majority of them
find themselves living on the economic edge, radicalized by the
struggle
to provide for themselves, their children and their older parents,
mostly
on one income.

These women aren't blinded by the latest "vibrant" GDP stats touted by
the
White House. They occupy the front lines of the Other America. They
know
what it means to have a child in a failing school. They live the
reality
of being forced to use an ER as the family doctor because they can't
afford health insurance. They understand the feeling of being one
paycheck
away from poverty. To them the WalMartization of our economy is not a
theoretical concept.

The issues single women are most concerned with — job security,
affordable
health care and decent educational opportunities for themselves and
their
children — also skew heavily in the Democrats' favor. When you're
barely
making ends meet, another round of tax cuts for millionaires doesn't
tend
to be very high on your political must-have list. Neither is spending
mega-billions fighting preemptive, ideological wars based on misleading
premises — especially when, more often than not, it's your loved ones
coming home in body bags.

It can't be helping Karl Rove sleep at night to know that single women
are
also more likely to support gun control, gay rights and, especially,
abortion rights. Talk about your potential culture war blowback.

And if that holy trinity of ugly GOP wedge issues doesn't turn out to
be
the final nail in the president's re-election coffin, this might:
Unlike
Bush, Grover Norquist and the high priests of the Leave Us Alone
Coalition, single women don't see the U.S. government as the enemy.
Indeed, for them government represents the last remaining strands of a
desperately needed social safety net.

So if untold millions of single women voters are likely to reject Bush
faster than a bucktoothed blind date with bad breath and a crummy car,
why
isn't the Kerry campaign busy drawing up the guest list for its
Inaugural
Ball?

Because the trick is getting these progressive-minded women to turn up
at
the polls.

As a group, single women feel particularly detached from the political
process. They don't believe that politicians listen to them or care
about
their problems. Compared to the big money interests that dominate our
politics, they feel powerless to effect real change. They are also
turned
off by the overwhelmingly negative tone of modern campaigns.

If John Kerry is going to capture the hearts and votes of this crucial
voting bloc, he's going to have to offer them more than sweet talk and
the
policy equivalent of a dozen roses.

Luckily for Kerry, what he needs to do to attract single women voters
is
exactly the same thing he needs to do to attract the rest of the
electorate: Provide a bold moral vision of what America can be. A
vision
that brings hope and soul back to our politics and appeals to more than
voters' narrow self-interests and unspoken prejudices.

Polls show that single women don't see themselves as tied to any
political
party. But they do see themselves as part of the larger American
community, and are deeply concerned about the well-being of their
neighbors and the nation as a whole. "This year, politicians of any
stripe
ignore these women at their peril," says Christina Desser, co-director
of
Women's Voices.

Single women are fed up and desperately want change. Now it's up to
John
Kerry to empower these Girls Gone Riled and convince them to kick
George
Bush to the curb.

© 2004 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.
DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.