Trump struggling with women voters: poll

Half of US women say they have a "very unfavourable" view of Donald Trump, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.

Donald Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at Lenoir-Rhyne University on March 14, 2016. Source: Getty Images

Real estate billionaire Donald Trump's coarse rhetoric has won him some fans, but there's at least one large group in America that is increasingly unimpressed: women.

Half of US women say they have a "very unfavourable" view of the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling, up from the 40 per cent who felt that way in October. The survey was taken from March 1-15, and included 5400 respondents.

The rise in anti-Trump sentiment among women could pose a problem for the New York billionaire in his quest for the White House. Women form just over half of the US population, and they have turned out at higher rates than men in every election since 1996, according to the US Census Bureau.
"If the presidential election were tomorrow, women would be a big problem for Trump," Republican strategist David Carney said. "But he has time to fix it."

A Trump campaign official did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but Trump has said that he has had good relationships with women in his business career and is well-liked by women voters.

Several women who oppose Trump, interviewed by Reuters this week, said their disapproval was based on a range of factors from his disparaging comments about women he dislikes - such as Fox News host Megyn Kelly - to his hard-line views on immigration and his ribald exchanges with rivals.

"I think Trump is very scary," said Mariah Dobias, a 25-year-old cook who was voting in Ohio's primary on Tuesday.

"He says he is going to make America great, but he doesn't say how he is going to do it besides alienating whole groups of people."
Carolyn Hostetler, a conservative from Tennessee, told Reuters she disliked "the way he has belittled women."

Some of Trump's female supporters, meanwhile, said they liked his straight talk, and believe he could strengthen America's position on the world stage.

"He's a little unpredictable, as we've seen," said Kathleen Douglas, a 65-year-old college professor from Winter Park, Florida who supports Trump. "He's going to put other world leaders on edge."

In Florida, exit polls conducted by Edison Research showed that Trump's support among Republican women voters was 40 per cent, versus 52 per cent among males. In Ohio, where Trump came in second to the state's governor, John Kasich, 33 per cent of women voters backed Trump, compared with 40 per cent of men.

If the GOP frontrunner were to run against Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton in the general election, likely women voters would support Clinton over Trump by nearly 14 percentage points, according to the March polling data. Among men, Clinton would win by about 5 percentage points.

Trump has been accused by critics of misogyny since he launched his campaign. He complained last year that Fox News host Megyn Kelly had asked him tough questions in a debate and referred to "blood coming out of her wherever." He more recently sent a Twitter post suggesting she was a "bimbo."

He has called television personality Rosie O'Donnell a "fat pig" and made fun of former presidential rival and ex-HP chief executive Carly Fiorina's face, saying, "Would anyone vote for that?"

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3 min read
Published 17 March 2016 9:56pm
Updated 17 March 2016 10:11pm
Source: AAP


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