By Sheila Monaghan on 10.18.04 @ 12:03AM
Security moms are protecting their children this election year.
Security moms are merely a "repackaged version of 2000's Soccer
Moms" -- one of the many "new, cleverly named and totally bogus
groups of swing voters that emerge like cockroaches out of a drain"
at this point in the campaign season, wrote Richard Morin in the
October 3rd Washington Post. Security moms are imaginary
pests to Morin, but he may discover that their bite is real.
The polls continue to show an ever-tightening race in which
swing voters will factor heavily. As recent studies by the Pew
Research center estimate that 22% of registered voters fall into
the "swing" category -- and the majority of these voters are
ladies.
Data from the 2000 election show a greater female turnout at the
polls in general. Fifty-eight percent of eligible male voters cast
their presidential ballots in 2000, while 61% of eligible women
made it to the polls. According to Susan Carroll, senior scholar at
the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University,
women are a larger proportion of the population than men and vote
at higher rates, which explains why nearly 7.8 million more women
voted in the 2000 elections than men and at least that many more
women than men are likely to vote in 2004.
Many of these women, Mr. Morin, are security moms. "Security
moms look at the world through the prism of their children," said
Andy Kohut of the Pew Research Center. "In 2000 that meant they
were focused on issues like healthcare, education, and -- to some
degree -- the environment."
The priorities of voting moms appear to have shifted. According
to its website, the Security Moms for Bush-Cheney -- founded by an
unidentified "New York Security Mom" inspired by the tragic events
of September 11 -- cite the War on Terror and a "future [for our
children] that is safe from terrorists" as the most critical issues
in the upcoming election. "Making America More Secure By
Confronting the Threats of Our World" and "Protecting the Homeland"
top the list of "decisive actions" taken "to improve the lives of
women" by the Bush administration, according to W Stands for
Women, a coalition group and arm of the Bush-Cheney '04
campaign.
"A recent poll by the Pew Research Center revealed that 76% of
women with young children are more concerned with national security
than they were prior to 9/11," Kohut has said.
These pro-Bush moms are mobilizing support for their candidate
through campaigns that encourage women to write letters to the
editors of local papers, make calls to local radio stations, host
parties, and participate in a nationwide rally to be held October
16th.
"The presidential candidate who better recognizes and responds
to the growing clout of women voters may well find himself in the
White House for the next four years," Carroll has predicted.
Perhaps in an attempt to draw the "swing moms" over to the
"security moms" side, the Bush-Cheney '04 team released a new
campaign ad on October 10 entitled "Thinking Mom," which will be
run on national cable and in select local markets. In the clip, the
Mom voiceover speaks of running late and needing to get groceries
as she laments tax increases on gasoline, Social Security benefits,
middle class parents and married couples -- tax increases John
Kerry voted to enact.
"More taxes because I'm married," the Mom says, "…what
were they thinking?"
Softer
Voices, a 527 organization of women who also back Bush,
generated approximately $250,000 for a similar ad campaign in the
battleground states of Pennsylvania and Ohio that began airing last
Thursday.
"The defining question of this presidential election is clear:
'Who is the strong leader committed to keeping our families safe
from terrorists?' This is the fundamental question women, in
particular, must ask themselves before they vote on November 2,"
says Lisa Schiffren, a Softer Voices board member and spokesperson.
"For a number of reasons, we believe the answer is undoubtedly that
only George W. Bush has correctly addressed the issue of protecting
our families from terrorism."
On November 2, the moms in minivans who drop their children off
at the soccer field and then drive to the polls to vote for George
Bush may decide this election.
topics:
Taxes, Education, Social Security, Environment