OPINION Page 4 Thursday, April 12, 1984 Gender Gap could prove crucial in The Michigan Daily '84 A couple of months ago Barbara Farah would have been lecturing to University students on women in politics or doing research at the University 's Institute for Social Research, but now she is in New York and director of polls for the New York Times. Farah spoke with Daily Opinion Page editor Jackie Young last month on several issues relating to the political power of women and Dialogue its effects on the 1984 presidential elections. One of the major differences in the way men and women vote at the polls is something described as the Gender Gap. Farah says that there are three distinct differences noted since 1980 which resulted in the political phenomena now known as the Gender Gap. In the 1980 elec- tions, the majority of women voted for Jimmy Carter with 10 percent fewer choosing Ronald Reagan. Then in 1982, in twq major states-New York and Texas-more women voted for the Democratic candidate. Michigan 's gubernatorial contest was also decided basically Farah, the rise in the number of women of voting age has also created a potentially powerful gap. The third difference connected with the Gender Gap, Farah says, is the priority women put on the issues. Women are more concerned about social welfare spending, the en- vironment, womens issues, and most are against a military buildup. Men 's priorities are geared more toward economic policy, strong defense spending, and measures to reduce the federal deficit. February opinion polls showed 44 percent of the women felt President Reagan was responsible for the tragedy in Lebanon compared to only 5 per- cent of the men polled. Farah says that such obvious discrepancies based on gender now make the women's vote "nothing to be sneezed at. " * *.* Daily; Do you have any statistics as to how many women are registered Democrats and how many are registered Republicans? Each party likes to say that they have traditionaly been the party most supportive of women. Farah: What we've shown is that we are not sure that registration will ex- trapolate with voting. We know more women are identifying with the Democratic Party than with the Republican Party. There are more registered Democrats and more Democratic identifiers than Republicans. We've discovered over the last five years that more women are identifying with the Democratic party than men. And there's a real gap there too. Women are really going toward the Democratic Party. Part of it has to do with feeling it's a safe haven or having a sense that the Democratic Party is more fit to their life style.. Daily: Have you any studies which rate the political power of women? Farah: In just numbers there are more women than men. And there are on this. You find that only'14 percent of state legislatures are women. Nation- wide, in all the state houses, there are only around 1,000 women. There are only around 22 women in Congress out of 435 in the House and 100 in the Senate. That's an appalling three or four per- cent. There is one women on the Supreme Court so that's a little better ratio out of eight. 'If more women vote and the turnout among women increases and is higher than that of men, then they for sure can elect the next president. Women have a lot of power.' more women voters than men voters. So there is a lot of potential there. The turnout of women and men is not the same but again there are more women and that's got to make a difference even when the turnout does not change. If more women vote and the turnout among women increases and is higher than that of men, then they for sure can elect the next president. Women have a lot of power. Any one group which in- creases their voter turnout increases their power. You increase those num- bers and especially if it were strategically placed in certain areas where those voted are needed, then you start to change the dynamics of the election. Daily: Have there always been more women voters than men voters? Farah: No. This has only occurred in the last decade that women went over men. The more sobering side of the point is that women are not powerful in elected office. I have done a lot of work Daily: But Sandra Day O'Connor hasn't necessarily represented her female constituency on the issues. Farah: Yes. There is also a qualitative or quantitative argument. I used to debate with students when I taught at the University whether it was better to have quality, meaning women who would vote for womens issues, or is it the numbers that count? What I have discovered over time is that I really delve on the quantity argument more than I did before because I see someone like Paula Hawkins who is a rather con- servative senator from Florida. Yet she has been very cognizant of women's issues, though very much like Ronald Reagan on some of the economic issues. She is aware of issues as a woman that a man would not be as aware of. And I have heard that repeated among mem- bers of a lot of state legislatures. That is a very significant thing that women have different agendas than men - even though a woman may be more conservative. Granted it's a two-edged sword, it's a matter of who you get. Daily: What are the chances that a woman will be nominated to the position of vice president this year? In which party? Farah: People can be very uncon- sciously critical. There seems to be a real sense of who would be suitable as a vice presidential candidate. And I have a feeling somebody who is senator or who is governor has the qualifications to get that vote. Somebody else who has not been at the national level or in pubic life or as visible may not be seen as being accomplished enough. So I'm just not convinced that the public is going to think a woman is qualified enough. For a male vice presidential candidate there is more tolerance. Men are seen as being more experienced just for being men, more readily than women. And until you get past that hurdle where women as vice presidentialucan- didates are coming along quite often, the. parties are going to have to be a lit- tle more circumspect as far as who they pick for that spot. Daily: Is it realistic to expect a woman to be nominated or even to be elected president in the next decade or so? Farah: Gallup polls have asked the question: "If a woman is qualified and if everything else is equal would you vote for a woman for president?" During the '30s when we first started to ask the question, the majority opinion was against a woman as president. Now we're up to somewhere in the high 80s approval of a woman as president. So the public opinion shows that people are willing to say they think of a woman as president but whether they will act on it really depends. Some of the women's organizations are now arguing that women shouldn't settle for second place, that they should just go for the big presidential position. I hope the electorate will do the following: If a woman were to win a party's nomination, the electorate would see that woman as a serious candidate who would be seen as no different than any other candidate running for that position and therefore gender would ulot enter into the vote at all. But it's going to be more difficult, which is true in any profession, because there aren't that many women up at the top yet or in the position from which you can make your leap. Most presidential candidates come from the Senate or a governor- ship and if you look around, there aren't that many women in these positions. There are two senators and one gover- nor so while it surely isn't impossible, it's just harder to convince people that you are qualified to be a viable can- didate coming from a position outside of government, or if you are not high up in national politics. That's the way it is. There is a very strong recruitment lad- der or a career ladder which you go through.w Daily: What other political phenomena now are you noting relating to women and the Gender Gap. Farah: One of the things that is very exciting is the massive voter registration drive focusing on women and the registration drive focusing on minorities. The women's registration drive is very critical because they are aiming it at women who traditionally don't vote - women who are poor' women who are on welfare - and if you get those women to vote, again it may change the texture of American politics. The system may be a little more representative than it is now. Dialogue is an occasional feature of the Opinion Page. because ofj and men the gap between women voters. According to i di ae dsteta nivt fan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIV-No. 154 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Heat Stroke La~ anL -I'Pq - 1 A5 supT N~ To ?READ DAFTLY.. y1 0 ..~-' ( N / IT'S A GOOD idea not to start out the summer with any delusions. The heat of those long-awaited months has a tendency to affect one's mind, so it is best to enter the upcoming balmy days with a firm, clear understanding of what's going on. As far as the University, and specifically as regent-student relations go, it is important to keep in mind the words of Regent Thomas Roach: "Yes, (student opinion) mat- ters, but at the same time you've got to remember that this is not a democracy. We don't make decisions based on what students think." It would be a mistake to go home to Flint,' or Birmingham, or Chicago believing that upon your return in the fall your voice was going to matter in any decisions being made at the Univer- sity. A notable decision will be arrived at next fall: whether or not to establish the student code for non-academic conduct. And all of the evidence suggests that no matter how loud and broad-based opposition to the code is, the regents and administration just won't listen. The regents ignored the results of this year's Michigan Student Assembly elections in which 79 percent of the students voting rejected the code. They also ignored the message of the University-sponsored hearing on the code in which 22 of 24 students who spoke said they would like to see the code thrown out or major revisions to it made. And University President Harold Shapiro has made clear his willingness to amend or abolish Regen- ts' Bylaw 7.02 which requires that MSA approve the code before it can be Ptalichad Th rpopnts andna- Regent Deane Baker remarks "I wouldsay that 75 percent of students on campus don't care whether MSA exists," he has hit upon a very impor- tant point. The student . body doesn't care about MSA. Not because MSA is incompetent, not because it is not representative, but because it is com- pletely powerless. President Shapiro stated it accurately: "The power of MSA is there only when the regents decide it will be." The student voice has been emasculated breeding resignation and apathy. Mocking MSA, Baker also said that, "MSA gains by opposing (the code). It gives them a cause to champion." His belittling of pursuing causes ignores the broad support that this particular cause possesses. The regents like to think that despite all of the opposition, there exists out there strong student approval for the code. Regent Thomas Roach has even talked of a ridiculous Institute of Social Research survey which he hopes could once-and-for-all accurately guage the student position. Not that the results would matter even if a great majority disapproved. "No matter what people say," said Baker, "the regents make the final decision on all of these judgements." That's too bad, because what if the regents are wrong? Concerning the issue of extending research guidelines, the regents ignored the student body, ignored the Faculty Senate, and even ignored the administration when they rejected the extended guidelines last summer. After all, what do students, professors, and administrators really know about military research? But the code is being created for the students. It is supposed to protect students, restrain students. Dunish students. and LETTERS TO THE DAILY: _ , eAS: .. s y Concentrate on local acti~v To the Daily: There is no explanation for the incredibly low voter participation in the recent Ann Arbor City elec- tions. In the precincts in and around the University in- volvement by registered voters did not reach 10 percent. Aside from destructive graffiti, what other ways are there to express one's views? The fact that there was no mayoral election, or probably more important that there was no proposed repeal of the $5 pot law, does not excuse the low turnout. How can anyone denounce the importance of city government? As students we live here at least 8 months out of the year. Technically it is our home so why not exercise the power of voting? People are naive if they are only preoccupied with the so-called big national or international issues. The plain truth of the matter is that all these voices are barely heard, and certainly are not loud enough to vibrate the eardrums of the people who make the decisions. The realization of the impor- tance of city government is United States involvement in Central America and nuclear disarmament. But one's credibility as a political activist is ruined when one forfeits the right and duty to vote. The issues in this election were applicable to anyone living in Ann Arbor-whether a resident or not. The road conditions are the most obvious and the need for a better bike pathway system is equally so. But what about the issues that aren't so obvious, like the removal of stagnate city of- ficials, the immensely high property tax that rips tenants off with each rent payment, and the S Ism need to address automobile parking in the city. Instead of preaching for the United States out of El Salvador, consider get- ting yourself out of Ann Arbor if you're not going to vote. -Eric Mazade April 6 Premeds are people too To the Daily: We were quite disappointed by your article "Gunning through Medical School" (Weekend, April 6). In consenting to interviews with a Daily reporter, we foolishly assumed that what we said would be accurately and ob- jectively recounted. This article has taught us a painful lesson: Daily reporters hear what they want to and ignore everything else, thereby perpetuating misconceptions rather than enlightening their readers. For example, while expressing to the reporter that academic BLOOM COUNTY rigors sometimes require one to make personal sacrifices, we clearly stated that these sacrifices were common to almost all University students, not ex- clusively those who intend to go to medical school. While we may not have been as academically underchallenged as one of our premed counterpar- ts, whose displeasure with the ar- ticle provoked a letter "Premeds not chained to tex- tbooks" Daily, April 8), we too have attended a variety of spor- ting and social events and have had the opportunity to become involved in campus and com- munity service organizations. We resent the implication that we or any, of our friends, are narrowly focussed merely 'because we have chosen medicine as a career. We hope that we will someday become a credit to our profession and, more importantly, to the people we serve. We only wish that you at the Daily could do the same. -Robert Weinfeld Erick Remer April 9 by Berke Breathed MI A __DWT . ,.r l /7- I A MY OPINION I5 / / f '.7 al no nlirm illtflcL