Kicking Ass: The Democratic Party's Blog

Standing Out from the Crowd

Posted by on July 26, 2006 at 06:08 PM

USA Today features an article on the five female Governor's up for re-election and their unique abilities to bring people together.

Although their numbers are still small, female governors stand out as better than their male counterparts at drawing crossover voters, dealing with the opposition party and winning re-election.

This emerging statistical picture suggests intriguing prospects that will be tested in November's elections, when a record five of the eight female governors in the USA are running for new terms.

Non-partisan analysts favor four of the five to win, even though all four are in states that were carried by the other party in the 2004 presidential race.

Among governors whose terms are up this year, women are twice as likely as men to be favored to win re-election.

And among all 50 governors, women are three times as likely as men to be running states dominated by the other party.

"You have to ask if there's a female M.O. (modus operandi) that acts to depolarize our politics, to dilute the ideological polarization between the parties that exists throughout the country," says political scientist Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

Kathleen Dolan, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and author of Voting for Women in the United States, questions whether women govern in fundamentally different ways than men: "I do not see women coming from Venus and men from Mars."

Still, she says, the public does view female candidates differently. "Voters see women as more bipartisan, they see them as more able to work across the aisle, they see them as more honest," she says. "It's possible that in very polarized electorates a woman candidate might receive a benefit of a doubt from voters."

The stakes are high. Governors forge statewide political organizations that can be key in other races and sometimes develop innovative policies in such areas as health and education. State capitals are a training ground for presidents: Four of the past five presidents served as governors.

...

80% of the female governors eligible to run this year are favored to win new terms. In contrast, 11 of the 26 male governors eligible to run are favored to win by the Cook report; that's 42%. Congressional Quarterly rates nine, or 35%, as favored.

Among all governors, five of the eight women — or nearly two-thirds — are in states dominated by the other party, compared with nine of the 42 men, or one-fifth.

Jeanne Shaheen, director of Harvard's Institute of Politics and a former three-term governor of New Hampshire, says female leaders tend to be "more consensus-building, more interested in getting input from other people and less interested in taking credit." She adds: "Women don't often have the need to be macho, to put it very bluntly, and therefore we have less trouble reaching out to somebody who might have been an opponent."

On the Web:
Democrat from Arizona, Janet Napolitano
Democrat from Kansas, Kathleen Sebelius
Democrat from Michigan, Jennifer Granholm

Comments (2) «

Are you kidding me? Jodie Rell, Republican Governor of CT got in, only when John Rowland was sent to prison, and she as Lt Governor moved into his spot ! She pretends 13 years of sitting next to John while he took gifts for contracts was never known to her! (BS !)

And NOW, her top aide has been forcing people to sell tickets to events for Jodie against campaign laws, and old Jodie pretends she knew nothing about it----plus refuses to fire Lisa Moody!

She has NO ability to bring people together, yet the people of CT will vote for her, because she is a CHANGE from a very disgusting past!

1
PamB on July 26, 2006 at 06:53 PM

I think many of the women who joined with Mrs. Clinton on tv with their plan for America should run for governor of their state. It is getting increasingly difficult to get the entire nation to agree on one person for President. You can make the most change and do the most good for your state as Governor. I am so very proud of my Democratic Governor Bredesen, and I pray that he wins the race again.

2
MominTN on July 31, 2006 at 10:52 AM


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