Trump’s failure as a man, husband and president

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Deleted User 1018

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morgan wrote: Sat Oct 20, 2018 3:48 pm Yup. 42% of American women voted for Trump. Gee whiz. That's a lot of "harsh, biased, racist, bigoted" women. Clearly they're all "arrogant and prejudiced". I bet every single one of them have" abusive, misogynistic, gang-rapist" husbands who made them vote for Trump. At gunpoint!
Nope. I voted Trump of mr own free will. I didn't want Hillary in the White House. And the way it's going now, I will be voting 3rd party in 2020
Deleted User 473

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Educated white women were already recoiling from Trump. Then came Kavanaugh.
Analysis by Ronald Brownstein, CNN
Updated 9:58 AM EDT, Tue October 02, 2018


(CNN) Even before Christine Blasey Ford delivered her controlled but explosive testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, college-educated white women like her represented a rising threat to Republican prospects in the November election.

But Ford's detailed allegations of sexual assault against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh could allow Democrats to solidify an unprecedented advantage among those women, who represent one of the few steadily growing components of the white electorate.

Coming even as many professional white women are already recoiling from President Donald Trump's definition of the Republican Party, and Democrats have nominated an unprecedented number of professional women for Congress, the collision between Kavanaugh and Ford -- a professional herself -- has the potential to reinforce a lasting shift in loyalties that could tip the partisan balance in white-collar suburbs around America.


"College-educated white women have identified very strongly with Dr. Ford and relate to her as a person, and will be turned off by the angry diatribes of Brett Kavanaugh," says Democratic pollster Ben Tulchin. "This dynamic will likely further boost college-educated women's engagement in this election."

A class gap on Kavanaugh
New polling released Monday showed how the confrontation over Ford's allegations could reinforce these dynamics. A national Quinnipiac University survey found that 61% of college-educated white women said they believed Ford over Kavanaugh; 58% of such well-educated women said the Senate should reject his nomination, according to detailed results provided by Quinnipiac.

By contrast, just over half of white women without degrees said they believed Kavanaugh and the Senate should confirm him.

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