Republicans confront a significant gender gap ahead of midterm elections

This year's gender gap may be the biggest ever seen in the American electorate.

A woman places her vote into the ballot box on March 5, 2016 in Bowling Green, Ky.
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When the latest Quinnipiac poll asked respondents whether Donald Trump is mentally stable or not, the president didn't fare especially well: only 48% of Americans said yes. But the gender breakdown pointed to an interesting result: while a narrow majority of men said they consider Trump mentally stable, 50% of women said the opposite.

The result was emblematic of the significant gender gap Republicans are confronting this year. Indeed, the same Quinnipiac poll showed the president with a weak 38% approval rating, but Trump fared even worse among women, with whom he has 34% support.

The new CNN poll, released yesterday, offered even more dramatic results.

"Do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?"Men: 42% approve, 51% disapproveWomen: 29% approve, 65% disapprove

That's not a typo.

Of course, the president isn't literally on the ballot this year, but that doesn't mean the news for congressional Republicans is much better. A recent Quinnipiac poll on the generic congressional ballot found women preferring Democratic candidates to GOP candidates by a whopping 25-point margin -- far larger than in other recent midterm election cycles.

A FiveThirtyEight analysis published last month made the case that voters may very well see a "record breaking" gender gap this fall, exceeding the midterm results in 1994.

Of course, the midterms are still two months away -- Election Day is exactly eight weeks from today -- and we may yet see public attitudes shift between now and then. But that's not necessarily good news for Republicans: if the Senate's GOP majority votes to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, a conservative jurist who's very likely to vote to overturn Roe v. Wade, the gender gap may yet get bigger.