Female Candidates May Finally Crush the ‘Electability Paradox’
Strength in numbers could help a woman take the Democratic Party nomination in 2020
There is a pretty decent chance a female candidate earns the Democratic Party nomination for the 2020 election. Those favorable odds are not due to one particular female candidate’s campaign; they’re owed to the fact that several women are running high-profile campaigns. The presence of multiple top-tier, viable female candidates in a presidential race is not something we’ve seen before — and it’s having a profound impact on how voters perceive the field of candidates and the prospect of electing a female president.
Of course, the United States has seen several viable female presidential candidates in the past — heck, Hillary Clinton even beat Donald Trump in the popular vote in 2016 — but never have we seen multiple women appear to actually have a shot. Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris are legitimately viable candidates for president, and Amy Klobuchar, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Tulsi Gabbard are in a second or third tier of viability.