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Public Opinion and Hillary Rodham Clinton as a Presidential Candidate

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Abstract:

This paper explores the role of public opinion polling in the 2008 presidential election regarding the concept of gender. The polls both reflect public culture and frame the concerns of the electorate. Having the first woman as a truly viable candidate for a major party nomination for president should impact the range and types of questions asked the public about their perspectives on the candidates. Categorizing the subject of the questions into masculine and femilalist orientations contributes to an understanding of how the election is being oriented in gendered terms. A sample of survey questions about Hillary Clinton has been drawn and their gendered nature analyzed.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

clinton (86), question (58), poll (56), hillari (55), women (52), would (45), elect (44), public (42), candid (40), polit (40), 2 (37), gender (37), survey (30), senat (30), presidenti (29), presid (29), percent (28), ask (28), one (27), 5 (26), gallup (26),

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Hillary Clinton, public opinion polls, presidential election
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Name: American Political Science Association
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MLA Citation:

Burrell, Barbara. "Public Opinion and Hillary Rodham Clinton as a Presidential Candidate" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hyatt Regency Chicago and the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers, Chicago, IL, Aug 30, 2007 <Not Available>. 2008-12-11 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p210922_index.html>

APA Citation:

Burrell, B. C. , 2007-08-30 "Public Opinion and Hillary Rodham Clinton as a Presidential Candidate" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hyatt Regency Chicago and the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers, Chicago, IL Online <PDF>. 2008-12-11 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p210922_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: This paper explores the role of public opinion polling in the 2008 presidential election regarding the concept of gender. The polls both reflect public culture and frame the concerns of the electorate. Having the first woman as a truly viable candidate for a major party nomination for president should impact the range and types of questions asked the public about their perspectives on the candidates. Categorizing the subject of the questions into masculine and femilalist orientations contributes to an understanding of how the election is being oriented in gendered terms. A sample of survey questions about Hillary Clinton has been drawn and their gendered nature analyzed.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online
Associated Document Available American Political Science Association

Document Type: PDF
Page count: 26
Word count: 6887
Text sample:
Public Opinion Polling and Hillary Clinton as a Presidential Candidate Barbara Burrell Political Science Department Northern Illinois University bburrell@niu.edu Paper prepared for presentation at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association Chicago Illinois 2007 Abstract This paper explores the role of public opinion polling in the 2008 presidential election regarding the concept of gender. The polls both reflect public culture and frame the concerns of the electorate. Having the first woman as a truly viable candidate for
Polls the News Media and Democracy eds. Paul J. Lavrakas and Michael W. Traugott. New York: NY: Chatham House Publishers. 3-19. Newport Frank and Joseph Carroll. 2006. “Personal Characteristics Loom Large in Americans' Views of Hillary Clinton: But negative views more likely to be based on politics and policy.” Gallup Poll News Service July 6. Saad Lydia. 2007. “Clinton Eclipses Obama and Edwards on Leadershi .” Gallup Poll News p Service January 31. Saul Michael. 2007. “Poll: Obama the


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