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Re: For Clinton, sisterhood is powerful � and Trump helps

By: ribit in FFFT3 | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 11 Jul 16 10:24 PM | 42 view(s)
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Msg. 22218 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 22214 by clo)

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clo
...men have sisters too.




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Liberals are like a "Slinky". Totally useless, but somehow ya can't help but smile when you see one tumble down a flight of stairs!




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The above is a reply to the following message:
For Clinton, sisterhood is powerful — and Trump helps
By: clo
in FFFT3
Mon, 11 Jul 16 5:05 PM
Msg. 22214 of 65535

For Clinton, sisterhood is powerful — and Trump helps
Susan Page, USA TODAY 6:20 a.m. EDT July 11, 2016

The woman's card? Hillary Clinton is playing it — and Donald Trump is helping her.

As the Democratic National Convention prepares to make history by nominating a woman for president, women in

national polls are giving Clinton the highest level of female support of any candidate in more than four decades and the widest gender gap ever recorded.Clinton's lead of a yawning 24 percentage points in the latest Pew Research Center Poll — not only among Democratic partisans but also from women who typically vote Republican — is an electoral challenge for the GOP that imperils Trump's ability to win the White House.— is an electoral challenge for the GOP that imperils Trump's ability to win the White House. 

In interviews with women across the country by the USA TODAY Network, some supporters are elated by the prospect of shattering what Clinton has called "the final, hardest glass ceiling," electing the first female president. "It's about time," says Stephanie Parra, 31, an education consultant in Phoenix. The Latina says Clinton is "breaking barriers for us."

But other women are driven less by support for Clinton than by antipathy to Trump. That's particularly true among Millennials, voters 35 and younger who were part of the Obama coalition but haven't warmed to Clinton, at least not yet. While seven in 10 younger women support Clinton, they say by more than 2-1 that their choice is more a vote against him than for her.

Lauren Rolwing, 32, an illustrator from Nashville who was interviewed at a downtown pet-shop-turned-coffeehouse called Fido, is still sporting her Bernie Sanders campaign button though she acknowledges he's not going to be the Democratic nominee. She's undecided between voting for Clinton or a third-party candidate.

"At this time, I'm not going to take anything off the table other than voting for Trump," she says. "That's off the table."

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/07/10/hillary-clinton-women-voters/86793244/


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