Commentators were falling over themselves yesterday to predict “20 years of Labor” after the Liberals chose Tony Abbott over the more marketable Malcolm Turnbull or Joe Hockey. Those predictions are in no small part based on Abbott’s checkered relationship with the female vote.
The average coalition primary vote for the past four quarterly Newspolls paints a lop-sided picture, with coalition support from women aged 18-24 at a measly 28.3%. For women 25-34 it’s 30.9%; for women 35-49, 34.3%; and for women 50-plus, 42.6%.
In contrast, Labor polls above 40 in each category.
The Liberal vote among women is down from 43% in the 2007 election to 37.9 now. This is in comparison to Labor, which polled 41 at the 2007 election, but had risen dramatically to 45.4% in the same demographic currently.
There are echoes here of the experience in the US, where the Democrats used their significant advantage among women voters to secure the 2008 election victory. In fact, the Democratic advantage among young female voters has almost doubled since 2004. According to PewResearch, four years ago more than half of women under the age of 30 were identified as Democrats. Today they a hold 35-point advantage with more than six-in-10 women in this age group calling themselves Democrats.
Labor is on its way to establishing a similar advantage among women in Australia. This is going to hurt the coalition particularly in outer suburban housing estates where higher concentrations of young women live with their children.
Although women are significantly under-represented on the political stage (and the upper echelons of business), Abbott’s advisers will be only too aware of the problems they face with the female half of the vote. The Turnbull experiment is over, but Abbott’s aggressive approach will do little to sway the female vote at the next election, looking increasingly like a double dissolution early next year.
There will never be a better opportunity for Labor to exploit this weakness. When Kerry O’Brien asked Abbott last night on the 7.30 Report about the crucial female bloc (his problematic area) he said: “I’m not going to try and pull the wool over women’s eyes … or anyone’s … people will see different aspects of my personality and make up their minds themselves.” Even this response will irk some — i.e. “women will like me when they see more of me.” And this is the problem — Abbott describes himself as a “conviction” politician, but a significant number of women only see an arrogant hardliner.
This has been evidenced time and again — most notably in proposals such as a return to at-fault divorce, his position on the abortion pill RU-486 and his swearing at female Labor MPs Nicola Roxon and Julia Gillard. Add this to his stance on the seismic issue of climate change and it’s not surprising that young women are loath to support him.
Morgan polling and Possum’s analysis on global warming shows a gender polarisation on the CPRS, too — although there was a 6% drop in the proportion of men that wanted action in November, the number of women sceptical of global warming did not change over the period.
According to a new study from the United Nations, women are more likely to take action to address wider environmental issues than men, too.
The election of Abbott is not only likely to result in a CPRS being passed, which is less favourable to Liberals’ core constituents in business, it is also likely to speed up the current trend of women voting Labor — once they are gone they will be very hard to get back.
“…but a significant number of women only see an arrogant hardliner…”
Beyond the predictable chorus of shrieking harpies, where is your ‘hardline’ evidence in making this assertion.
I want quotes from REAL women…not polls where the questions are spuriously designed to ensure a predetermined response.
Morgan’s ‘poll’ was a phone interview of 674 people.
674.
Just 0.0000306% of the population.
Hardly what any decent researcher would call a representative of sample of ANYTHING, with the margin of error further negating the possibility of any definable trend.
Who commissioned this ‘poll’? Gary Morgan maybe a Labor Party stooge, but he’s not a charity.
I also note with some degree of mirth that Labor voters ‘polled’ the highest (12%) across all sample sets in responding “do not understand” when asked the question:
“…“There’s proposed legislation before Federal Parliament for a carbon emissions trading scheme to be introduced in Australia. Do you approve or disapprove of this legislation?”…”
Just admit you don’t like Abbott because he is a married, heterosexual God-Fearing Christian.
That’d make him just like Kevin Rudd.
“a significant number of women only see an arrogant hardliner.”
True. And that’s not just an opinion limited to a significant number of women.
Conservative Catholic Tony is of the traditional Christian view that women should be subservient to men.
It’s the whole misogynistic power trip. And it was on display when he took to the podium with the ever loyal Julie Bishop at his side declaring her “a good girl”.
How patronising.
And then suggesting that he has ‘flirted’ with Julia Gillard in Parliament and how all that ‘fun’ will have to stop.
These are the sentiments of a man who has no respect for women and sees them as mere second rate players in his tiny scheme of things.
Already Abbott is starting to delineate the differences with Labor. That much was apparent during Kerry O’Brien’s interview.
As for his alleged adverse effect on women. Julia Gillard’s description of she and Abbott ” chasing each other” around, and then apologising, was hardly evidence of Abbott’s alleged misogyny. In fact, I can’t recall Julia so clearly wearing her heart on her sleeve, as during her short congratulatory speech in parliament, after Abbott won the leadership battle.
Abbott has three daughters. His wife and his daughters will be a big electoral asset.
But what is especially gratifying is that Abbott is drawing up the battle lines. Reminds me of that great scene in Braveheart when William Wallace’s compatriots ask him what he’s going to do,as he goes to negotiate with Longshank’s army generals.
” I’m going to pick a fight” replies Wallace.
What a fight it’ll be!
Most peculiar Papa, your carry-on about shrieking harpies and Real women shows a most peculiar mentality about women. A mentality somewhat similar similar to, but stupider than, your hero.
“His wife and his daughters will be a big electoral asset.”
LOL! Sure..
That would be the daughter that called him a ”lame, gay, churchy loser”