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The gender gap and abortion took center stage with voters

An anti-abortion protester walks past as abortion-rights activists participate in a demonstration in front of the Supreme Court.
Anna Moneymaker
/
Getty Images
An anti-abortion protester walks past as abortion-rights activists participate in a demonstration in front of the Supreme Court.

The gender gap took center stage in this year’s election: Vice President Harris attempted to woo women voters by emphasizing the party’s commitment to reproductive freedom, while former President Donald Trump focused his efforts on getting men to vote.

Trump’s strategy has seemed to be successful: his appearances on podcasts with mostly male audiences, like The Joe Rogan Experience and Full Send Podcast, have emphasized his position as the “man’s candidate,” according to Jackson Katz, the creator of the documentary The Man Card.

“The message being sent to young men was ‘I see you, I care about you, and the other side thinks you're toxic,' ” Katz told NPR’s Morning Edition.

Meanwhile, Harris may have struggled to recruit female voters after Trump relaxed some of his positions on federal abortion bans. Last month, Trump said that he would veto a federal abortion ban, which may have eased female voters' concerns about reproductive freedoms.

“I think women sort of said, ‘OK, well, maybe that's taken care of and we can vote with our pocketbooks,’ ” said Elaine Kamarck, the director of the Center for Effective Public Management at Brookings Institution.

Copyright 2024 NPR

Mansee Khurana
Mansee Khurana is a producer at Morning Edition and Up First podcast where she works on everything from directing the show to reporting stories for the air. She joined Morning Edition in 2022, after working on NPR's Network Bookings and Special Coverage team during the midterm elections. Previously, she was a producer on Life Kit and an intern and the Education Desk, and NPR's history podcast, Throughline.

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