Can a woman win the presidency? Clash exposes deeper issue
WASHINGTON — The smouldering political flareup between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders has rekindled debate over a question that has been gnawing at Democratic primary voters for more than three years: Can a woman beat President Donald Trump?
Many voters openly support the idea of the first female president but quietly worry that inherent gender biases could make an election victory difficult after Democrat Hillary Clinton’s defeat in 2016. The issue has left many questioning whether advancing the cause of electing a woman to the White House is more important than betting on a male candidate seen as having a better shot of prevailing in 2020.
The question is especially challenging for female candidates, who say that acknowledging their tougher political road could make them seem weak but that ignoring it means refusing to accept reality. Of the six women who entered the 2020 presidential race, only Warren is polling among the top tier. She’s clustered together in many polls with Sanders, a Vermont senator, former Vice-President Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana.
Democratic strategist Adrienne Elrod, a senior adviser to Clinton’s 2016 campaign, said Clinton’s team entered the race “naively” thinking gender bias wouldn’t be an issue in a country that already had elected its first black president and that had an accomplished female candidate who had already been a senator and secretary of state. They quickly learned otherwise.