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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 10, 2023

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The US has women's suffrage everywhere. In California, for instance, 66.5% of women voted, while only 63.7% of men voted. Compare to Utah: it has 66.6% of women voting, and 60.6% of men. Would you say Utah is more dysfunctional than California?

https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/number-of-individuals-who-voted-in-thousands-and-individuals-who-voted-as-a-share-of-the-voter-population-by-sex/

In Utah I am guessing most of those women are married and voting the same as their husbands?

Or their husbands are voting the same as them; marriage changes how both vote. (I'd be curious to see how marriage affects how gay men and women vote.)

Admittedly, Utah's probably a unique case; Texas is a better comparison. But the trend also holds there. The point stands that more women voting doesn't seem to lead to particularly "empathetic" policy.

Also consider: the 1979 general election in the UK would have resulted in a Labour majority with only a male franchise. Were the UK's 70s woes due to too little Labour power?

Also consider: the 1979 general election in the UK would have resulted in a Labour majority with only a male franchise. Were the UK's 70s woes due to too little Labour power?

Indeed, and even more than this women were far more likely to vote Conservative throughout the 1950s and 1960s, indeed the gap was at points a yawning 20+ point chasm.