FiveThirtyEight
Galen Druke

I think that when it comes to Trump and college-educated white women, it is an awful lot about tone and character. During a report I did on the “ultimate Romney-Clinton” district in Houston, a GOP strategist told me pretty bluntly that Trump will “never be their cup of tea.” Even when the economy was doing great in the fall of 2018, they didn’t turn out for Republicans in that district. So, really, I’m not sure what kind of message a surrogate could give that could change negative views on Trump’s character. They are so baked in.

Chris Jackson

In fact, Micah, most polls show that women are more concerned than men with the big issues, like COVID-19, which makes the minimal focus on the pandemic strange if the strategy is about winning them over.

Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux

Right, Micah, that’s what I was trying to get at when I said I wasn’t sure how effective this kind of pro-women message would be. I don’t think those white women have suddenly woken up post-2016 and decided that Trump isn’t supportive enough of women.


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