'Can single women swing the election?'

Article here. Excerpt:

'This political season, single women keep finding themselves at the center of political firestorms. Both parties and the media have recognized that single women are one of the country’s fastest growing demographics and a potentially crucial voting bloc. As the New York Times recently wrote, single women lean strongly toward Obama in polls, but they are not reliable voters, often feeling like politics don’t address their everyday concerns.
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In the 1970s and 1980s, the number of single women in this country also grew dramatically. A rising number of divorces and increasing economic opportunities for women outside of marriage created new constituencies. Finding their access to economic resources—from credit to pensions—severely limited in a political economy built around the assumed norm of a nuclear family, these women organized. They formed groups like the Older Women’s League and the Alliance for Displaced Homemakers, which demanded legal reform to give single women access to badly needed resources. They proposed creative solutions to the problems single women faced on a day-to-day basis – for example, new ways of calculating Social Security benefits based on a couple’s shared earnings.'

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How come no one ever asks 'Can single men swing the election?' Or just 'Does this election hinge on men's votes?' It's like men don't vote or something!

This election in particular is going to hinge on who can energize their base best, ie, to get out the vote. That is looking like the GOP and guess what, most Reps. are men. So the question this election season is, 'Can men swing this election?' and it looks like the answer is a simple 'Yes.'

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