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Clinton's Gender Gaining in Importance in Her Campaign

By JOSH GERSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | November 2, 2007

The largely dormant issue of Senator Clinton's gender is moving to the fore in the presidential contest after her campaign complained that her six male Democratic rivals subjected her to a "pile on" at Tuesday's night debate.

"On that stage in Philadelphia, we saw six against one. Candidates who had pledged the politics of hope practiced the politics of pile on instead," Mrs. Clinton's campaign manager, Patricia Solis Doyle, wrote in a fund-raising email to supporters yesterday, one day after releasing a Web video highlighting the same "pile on."

"She is one strong woman. She came through it well. But Hillary's going to need your help," Ms. Solis Doyle wrote.

Mrs. Clinton echoed the gender theme during a speech at Wellesley College yesterday when she spoke about her effort to break into "the old boys' club of presidential politics." Her pollster, Mark Penn, warned of indications that female voters could prompt a "backlash" against candidates who challenged Mrs. Clinton. A key supporter, Gerald McEntee of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, also cast the debate in gender terms. "Six guys against Hillary," he said. "I'd call that a fair fight."

"As the other candidates, male candidates, frankly, attack her, it's not a free shot in terms of how this base of voters may react to that," a Democratic pollster, Geoffrey Garin, said as he outlined a new poll of women likely to vote in the Democratic primary.

Mr. Garin compared the Philadelphia encounter to a debate in 2000 when Mrs. Clinton's Republican opponent for the Senate, Rick Lazio, crossed the stage and approached her podium. "People didn't like it, and women in particular in New York in that election didn't like it," the pollster said.

A spokesman for John Edwards, one of the candidates who challenged Mrs. Clinton on Tuesday, said complaints about her being ganged up on were "smoke and mirrors" to divert attention from inconsistent answers she gave during the debate. "That's not the 'politics of piling on,' it's the politics of parsing," the aide to Mr. Edwards, Chris Kofinis, said.

The Clinton campaign's use of gender in its response to the debate could play well in the Democratic primary, in which about 60% of voters are women. However, if such talk alienates men, it could hurt Mrs. Clinton in the general election, where winning male votes will be more critical. A women's political group that has endorsed Mrs. Clinton, Emily's List, commissioned the new survey of Democratic women voters in Arizona, Georgia, and New Jersey. In a press release, Emily's List said the poll found solid support for the New York senator across all demographic groups. The political committee also claimed that the poll showed that "most women won't choose their presidential nominee based on gender."

However, 21% of the women surveyed described the fact that Mrs. Clinton would be the first female president as "more important than anything else" about the election, defined as a"10" on a zero-to-10 scale. Another 31% rated the issue between 6 and 9. According to the poll data, the average answer was 5.48, signaling that the gender issue carries substantial weight with most women who vote in Democratic primaries.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

Watch her start wearing PINK and going "girly" on us to help her status as "victim." She wanted to play with... [MORE]

kit hogan 

Nov 2, 2007 11:03

I believe this article misquotes Mrs. Clinton's remark at Wellesley. She said "the all boys' club" instead of the old... [MORE]

Clark W. 

Nov 2, 2007 13:08

I am a professional woman and an independant voter. I find Hillary Clinton's coy and opportunitistic use of gender sexist,... [MORE]

Marinne Zimmerman 

Nov 2, 2007 14:29

I'm saddened that 21% of the women surveyed think gender is, " more important than anything else". It's even scarier... [MORE]

Steve Epperheimer 

Nov 2, 2007 15:56

Some one other than Bill please stand up and challenge this Woman. [MORE]

Mrs. Clinton, please answer the question. 

Nov 2, 2007 16:05

I wonder how Senator Clinton would respond to the kind of pressure that President Bush receives from Congress? [MORE]

Maxine Wilson 

Nov 2, 2007 16:41

If she is afraid to answer questions from other canidates and voters would she be afraid of Al Qaeda??? [MORE]

Richard 

Nov 3, 2007 08:45

I am not at all surprised that Senator Clinton is playing the gender card when cornered. It only validates my... [MORE]

Valerie Donnelly 

Nov 4, 2007 13:44

You've got to be kidding me Hillary needs to grow up and stop the poor me's. She is going to... [MORE]

Jim G 

Nov 2, 2007 18:18

Mrs. Clinton was faced for the first time with real opposition and she failed the test! Embracing gender as an... [MORE]

A. M. Coleman 

Nov 2, 2007 18:56

I wish she'd just go away! I feel embarrassed for her the way she acts: can't answer a question without... [MORE]

Mary 

Nov 2, 2007 19:13

I can't wait for Hillary to mess up. I'm a woman, but I don't want her to be president! It... [MORE]

M Beachley 

Nov 2, 2007 20:13

if as the saying goes,if you can't stand the heat,get out of the kitchen? but then again does anybody believe... [MORE]

jim t 

Nov 3, 2007 09:32

First, she joined Obama in voting against keeping English as our national language. Her votes have always been for amnesty.... [MORE]

Henry Tisdale 

Nov 3, 2007 20:09

We sorely need a statesman to come to the fore as president--not a politician Hillary is clearly just another politician [MORE]

Gilbert Rothman 

Nov 4, 2007 09:32

I have no problems with a woman being President, just not Hillary. She has absolutely no morals at all as... [MORE]

Charles Landi 

Nov 4, 2007 11:47

if she couldn't handle these men how could she run the country and possibly the world? and how could she... [MORE]

jane 

Nov 4, 2007 19:09

The Clintons are bullies. If they don't get it their way, they intimadate. When someone beats them at their own... [MORE]

Doris Libby 

Nov 5, 2007 10:19