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Opinionopinion

Tories have a mountain to climb with women voters

With the country’s principal political parties fighting to get their messages out in conference season, Chris Game looks at problems communicating with half of the electorate.

Voting(Image: Mirrorpix)

Coming bang in the middle of the conference season, Angela Merkel’s remarkable reconfirmation last weekend of her personal popularity with German voters can’t have made entirely comfortable watching for any of our own male party leaders. For all, in differing ways, have their women trouble.

True, only º£½ÇÊÓÆµIP’s Nigel Farage has, or had, the incubus of the ludicrous Godfrey Bloom – the only member, one hopes, of the European Parliament’s women’s rights and gender equality committee who imagined it amusing to refer to female party colleagues as ‘sluts’.

Bloom, though, was but a symptom, a mild headache compared with the migraine of the ‘old man’s party’ image that will continue to afflict º£½ÇÊÓÆµIP long after the conference hijacker himself is gone and forgotten.

The Ipsos MORI report, The Women Problem, commissioned by the Mumsnet website to coincide with the party conferences, was titled to emphasise the problem that David Cameron and the Conservatives generally have with women voters.

In polls averaged over the first half of this year, Labour’s lead over the Conservatives among men was just four per cent (35 to 31), but among women 13 per cent (42 to 29). Put into historical context, as it is briefly below, a gender gap of nine per cent in this direction has to be concerning for the Conservatives.

However, the gender gap for º£½ÇÊÓÆµIP was proportionately even greater: 15 per cent of men saying they’d vote º£½ÇÊÓÆµIP in a General Election, compared to eight per cent of women.

It would be surprising if a party led largely by men and supported predominantly by men were represented by loads of women, and it isn’t.

All five º£½ÇÊÓÆµIP members on West Midlands principal councils are men, and 120 of the 135 county councillors (89 per cent) elected last May. Its nine remaining MEPs are all men, as are 86 per cent of its shortlisted candidates for next year’s elections.