College-Educated Women Are Moving Away From GOP

12/26/17
 
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from The Wall Street Journal,
12/26/17:

Recent WSJ/NBC News poll shows women with four-year degrees favor Democrats over Republicans leading Congress by 32 percentage points.

When Republicans regained control of the House in 2010, they were propelled by a big swing toward the party among women. Now, signs are emerging Republicans could be handicapped in 2018 by women shifting away from the GOP.

In particular, women with a four-year college degree have moved toward favoring Democratic control of Congress, recent polling shows, helping to account for a substantial Democratic lead in multiple surveys on the question of which party Americans want to see leading Congress after the midterm elections.

The latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll shows Democrats with a 20-point edge among women on control of Congress. That lead is larger than the 12-point Democratic edge among women during the last midterms, in 2014.

The Democratic advantage is even bigger among women with college degrees. These women would rather see Democrats than Republicans lead Congress by 32 percentage points, 62% to 30%, far larger than the party’s edge among these women in the past two midterm years, the latest Journal/NBC News survey found.

The dynamic is different in rural areas, where support for the president tends to be strong. Debra Brydon, a community health nurse in rural Pennsylvania with a bachelor’s degree, said that the past year had solidified her support for Republicans.

“The motivating factor for me is that the Democrats won’t work with the president,” she said. “My son is a coal miner. He’s now worked a full year with no layoffs. That’s directly related to Trump.”

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