Dave Gilson

Senior Editor

San Francisco native, word wrangler, data cruncher, chart drawer, pun maker. Recent areas of interest: campaign finance, income inequality, prison riots.

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Dave Gilson has worked at Mother Jones since 2003. Previously, he worked for the San Francisco Bay Guardian, the Center for Investigative Reporting, and the Northern California bureau of the New York Times.

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Charts: Women Are Backing Obama by the Binderful

| Thu Oct. 25, 2012 3:13 AM PDT

Earlier this week, the New York Times' Nate Silver wrote about the gaping "gender gap" at the heart of the presidential race, specifically the degree to which women are breaking for Barack Obama and men are breaking for Mitt Romney. On average, polls show Obama beating Romney by 9 points with women, while Romney has a 9-point advantage with men. All in all, that's an 18-point gender gap, a powerful indicator of just how much each candidate's chance of victory depends on one sex or the other.

(Update: Does a new AP poll mean the gender gap is gone? Not so fast.)

The red-blue gender gap has grown during the past two decades, but women and men's presidential preferences have often diverged. According to historical Gallup survey data, in 1952, women supported Republican Dwight Eisenhower by more than 5 points over men; likewise, men broke toward Democrat Adlai Stevenson by 5 points. (Total gender gap: 10 points.) By the '80s, women supported Democratic candidates much more solidly than men. In the 2008 election, 57 percent of women voted for Obama, compared with 50 percent of men; 50 percent of men voted for John McCain, while 43 percent of women did. (Total gender gap: 14 points.)

In short, women have been increasingly backing Democrats by the binderful. Nearly 30 years of exit-poll data tells the story:

The shift has been most dramatic among women 18 to 29 and single women. A new report from the the Voter Participation Center finds that the gap between married and single women's support for Democrats is profound. In 2008, unmarried women chose Obama over McCain by a whopping 41 points, while McCain carried married women by 3 points. This is big news for Democrats, especially considering that unmarried women made up 23 percent of voters in 2008. The gender gap helps explain why this year's race is so tight. A slice of recent swing-state polling by Public Policy Polling shows that it's very pronounced in key battleground states, including Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin, Virginia, and Iowa. (And that's just one pollster's results.)  

So why are more women flocking to Democratic presidential candidates (and fleeing Republicans)? The answer doesn't seem too complicated, what with stuff like this, this, and this. A recent Gallup poll in 12 swing states found that more than half of female voters said that abortion or equal opportunity were their top election priority—issues that the president's campaign has repeatedly hammered Romney, Paul Ryan, and Republicans on.

Or maybe it's just hormones.

Update, 10/25: According to a just-released AP poll, Romney has erased his 16-point disadvantage with women and his lead with men has shrunk to 5 points. However, this is is just one poll; it will be interesting to see if other nationwide tracking polls show similar shifts in the week ahead. As Nate Silver's post explained, nine major polls show a significant gender gap; the 18-point split he cited was an average of those. It didn't include AP. If you factor in the new AP poll, Obama has an average 8.5-point advantage with women; Romney's average advantage with men is 8.7 points.

Update 2, 10/25: A new ABC News/Washington Post poll finds a 14-point gender gap, with support for Obama falling among unmarried women.

This article has been revised.

Who Was at Romney's "47 Percent" Fundraiser?

| Tue Sep. 18, 2012 4:01 AM PDT
Marc Leder, left, hosted a fundraiser for Mitt Romney at his Boca Raton home on May 17, 2012.

Update: Following the release of the full "47 percent" transcript, we've ID'd some more potential donors. See below.

As Mother Jones reported yesterday, speaking at a private fundraiser in Florida this May, Mitt Romney expressed his disdain for "the 47 percent" of Americans who are "dependent upon government," "believe that they are victims," and "will vote for the president no matter what." The event was held at the Boca Raton home of private equity manager Marc Leder, who has donated $225,000 to the pro-Romney super-PAC Restore Our Future and $63,330 to the Romney Victory PAC. Employees of his firm, Sun Capital Partners, have given more than $970,000 to the Romney campaign and its related PACs in this election cycle (including donations from spouses). 

So who else was on hand for Romney's "off the cuff" remarks at Leder's spread on May 17? According to the TC Palm, 150 people attended the $50,000-per-plate event. The guest list hasn't been made public, but some possible attendees can be picked out of campaign finance records.

A search for Florida-based donors brings up more than 30 people who gave $50,000 to the Romney Victory PAC between May 1 and May 17:

Name Occupation Company City
Dixie Arthur Accountant ASAP Capital Partners Tampa
Thomas D. Arthur Retired   Tampa
Robert M. Beall Chairman Beall's Inc Bradenton
Douglas F. Berman Fund Manager HIG Capital Weston
Timothy M. Bryan Chairman & CEO Galaxe Solutions Key Biscayne
Mitchel A. Burns Chairman Emeritus Ryder System Miami
Christopher Cline Executive Foresight Management Palm Beach Gardens
Richard A. Corbett Real Estate Developer Concorde Companies Tampa
Jeffrey Feingold CEO McNa Dental Plans Delray Beach
James P. Gills Ophthalmologist St Luke's Cataract & Laser Institute Tarpon Springs
F. Phillip Handy CEO Strategic Industries Winter Park
Michael Hechberger COO Infinity Sales Group Boca Raton
Gabe Hoffman Managing Member Of General Partner Cardens Capital Miami Beach
Manuel Kadre Attorney Manuel Kadre Pa Coral Gables
Jonathan I. Kislak Venture Capital Antares Capital Miami Shores
Rafael Kravec Retired   Bal Harbour
Sidney W. Lassen Business Executive Sizeler Realty Palm Beach
Lisa J. Leder Homemaker [Marc Leder's ex-wife]   Boca Raton
E. Barry Mansur Investments Mansur Realty Captiva
Henry Mccance Venture Capital Greylock Partners Lake Wales
Dr. Roger Medel Physician Mednax Inc Davie
Manuel Medina CEO & President Medina Capital Partners Miami
Thomas Neff Chairman Spencer Stuart North Palm Beach
William D. Perez Senior Consultant Greenhill & Co Naples
Randal L. Ringhaver Chairman & President Ring Power Corp Saint Augustine
Raul Rodriguez CEO Clinical Medical Services Miami Lakes
Brian D. Schwartz Private Equity HIG Capital Fort Lauderdale
John H. Sykes Self-Employed Sykes Enterprises Tampa
Ellen Teresi Publishing Executive Paisano Publications Fort Lauderdale
Joseph Teresi Publisher/CEO Paisano Publications Fort Lauderdale
Mrs. Anthony Traviesa Venture Capital V3 Partners Llp Tampa
Robert Zangrillo Founder Dragon Global Management Miami Beach

Source: Sunlight Foundation Influence Explorer

A broader search for big Florida donors suggests some more contenders. For example, Bill Bain, the retired founder of Bain & Company and Bain Capital, who lives in Naples, gave $50,000 to the Romney campaign PAC on April 25, less than a month before the fundraiser. Might he have driven across the state to hear Romney talk in Boca Raton? Perhaps, but the Leder event was just one of several fundraising events Romney attended in Florida in this time period, including another in Boca the same day.

We'll update this post as we try to confirm these and any additional names.

Update: The complete transcript of Romney's remarks provides additional clues about who was there. A few names are mentioned, starting with one "Hilary":

Romney: And by the way, I am serious about the food. Bring that…clear the place, but Hilary has to eat her beets. [Audience laughs.]

Was this directed at Hilary Ross, a Palm Beach resident who gave $75,800 to the Romney Victory PAC two days before the event? (Her husband Wilbur gave the same amount on the same day and had previously given $50,000 in late April.) Or was it Hillary Krouse, a Boca Raton resident who gave $73,300 two days earlier? She's the wife of Rodger Krouse, the business partner of the event's host, Sun Capital Partners chief executive Marc Leder.

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