Similarly, if men were removed from the franchise, Kamala Harris would be swept into the Oval Office in an even bigger earthquake. As it is, the two are clashing in an election marked by a gulf so wide, the phrase "gender gap" doesn't do it justice. In ways that go deeper than mere politics, and with implications for the world beyond the US, the presidential election is increasingly looking like a war between men and women.
The numbers are stunning. An NBC poll last month found men favour Trump over Harris by 12 points, 52% to 40%. Among women, Harris leads Trump by 21 points: 58% to 37%. Put the two together and you have a gender chasm of 33 points.
What explains it? The most obvious answer is that Trump's record, including a court ruling that he had committed rape and his own admission of serial sexual assault, boasting that he grabbed women "by the pussy", makes him repellent to tens of millions of women, none of that reduced by appointing a sidekick who speaks of "childless cat ladies". Similar explanatory power attaches to the 2022 decision by the supreme court, in the Dobbs case, to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion. Since then, it's been up to the 50 states whether to grant or withhold that right from women, and 22 of them have chosen to deny it. That shift is on Trump, who nominated three of the six supreme court judges who made the Dobbs decision.
Esta historia es de la edición October 04, 2024 de The Guardian Weekly.
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