Ready for a Woman President?

Author:

DeMora Stephanie L1ORCID,Lindke Christian A1ORCID,Merolla Jennifer L2,Stephenson Laura B3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science at the University of California PhD candidate in the , Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA

2. Department of Political Science at the University of California professor in the , Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA

3. Department of Political Science at the University of Western Ontario in London professor in the , Ontario, Canada

Abstract

AbstractEven though a record number of women ran for the Democratic nomination in 2020, Clinton’s loss in 2016 led pundits, party elites, and voters to worry about whether the country would be willing to support a woman for president, and polling organizations regularly asked questions that tapped into such concerns. While the vast majority expressed willingness to vote for a woman for president in polls, people were more skeptical about how their neighbors felt. Our research question cuts to the heart of this issue: How does polling information about comfort with the idea of a woman president affect perceptions of the electability of actual women running for their party’s nomination, and in turn voting decisions? We expect that exposure to signals of low comfort with a woman president will reduce perceptions of electability, and in turn dampen support for women at the nomination stage, but there are competing hypotheses for how signals of high comfort will be received. We further expect that Democratic women will be most affected by such information. We test these expectations with an experiment fielded on the 2019 Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES). Our findings have important implications for media coverage of polls related to women running for executive office.

Funder

University of California

Political Communication Conference

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,History,Communication

Reference66 articles.

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