Presidential Candidate Spouses May Have Record Unfavorable Ratings in 2016

As the primary phase of the presidential campaign winds down speculation about the prospect of a Donald Trump versus Hillary Clinton general election showdown has heated up. In so many ways a matchup between these presidential contenders breaks new ground as far as U.S. presidential elections are concerned. One significant departure from previous campaigns can be found in the way each candidates’ spouses break the mold from the traditional expectations Americans have for the individuals who have occupied these roles.

On the Democratic side with Bill Clinton not only are we likely to have the first male presidential spouse in U.S. history, he also happens to be a former U.S. President with a very unique and controversial political record in his own right. For the Republicans, Melania Trump, a Slovenian immigrant with an extensive modeling career which became a major flashpoint during the course of the GOP primary casts a very different profile than her predecessors in many ways as well. Since Clinton and Trump deviate so prominently from the traditional norms that presidential candidate spouses have adopted in recent years what does this development mean for how the American public views them in the 2016 election?

Based on our own research examining public attitudes toward the spouses of the two major party candidates in general elections from 1992-2012 along with poll results gauging the favorability of Bill Clinton and Melania Trump in the 2016 campaign we can offer a preliminary answer this question. We have compiled the aggregate favorable and unfavorable ratings for the spouses of the Republican and Democratic nominees from 1992-2012 with an update for poll questions asked so far in 2016 which we include here.

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From these data several trends emerge that shed light on how the public views the spouses of the leading presidential contenders in 2016. First, the public expresses a preference for spouses who embody a more traditionalistic view of the First Lady (or in the case of Bill Clinton, first gentlemen) who does not intend to play a major policy role in presidential administration. Barbara and Laura Bush represent this preference with the highest favorability ratings over this period. Hillary Clinton’s high unfavorable ratings in 1996 were due in part to perceptions that she was too deeply involved in helping shape White House policy. In 2016 Bill Clinton also has some of the highest unfavorable ratings in this time series. This finding can be linked his well-established political record so naturally he engenders less support than spouses largely outside of the political fray like the Bushes and even Michelle Obama.

There have been fewer polls asking about Melania Trump than Bill Clinton so far in the 2016 campaign but what indicators are available suggest the public is more negative than positive about her so far. If this trend were to continue over the course of the campaign she would be the only spouse of the past two decades with a net negative favorability rating.

This development can be tied to another trend we find in our research about how the public evaluates spouses. While they are certainly viewed as distinct political entities in their own right, and they possess a somewhat unique ability to rise above the political fray, citizens’ feeling toward the candidates’ spouses are colored by their own views of the presidential candidates themselves. While both general election nominees are perceived unfavorably by the public Donald Trump has the highest negatives of any major nominee in recent memory.

Since Melania Trump is not a well known quantity among most Americans much of the reaction to her is mediated by how the public feels toward Donald Trump. Unless or until Donald Trump can reverse his standing with American voters Melania Trump’s ratings will suffer in comparison to the spouses of the past few election cycles.

Of course these early numbers can fluctuate throughout the course of the campaign with new information encountered by voters. In recent presidential elections, candidate spouses have been well positioned to campaign on behalf of their husbands due to their high approval ratings, higher than their husbands in many cases and receive some level of support from those across the partisan aisle.

Whether Melania Trump will be able to help her husband’s campaign in a similar way depends in part on whether she can reverse her favorable/unfavorable scores. She may be able to improve her image with a well-received GOP convention speech in Cleveland. Particularly if she emphasizes that she will play the traditional role of First Lady in a Donald Trump administration.

As communications scholar Tammy Vigil has noted, the popularity of female presidential candidate spouses has been helped when they embrace traditionally gendered rhetoric and issue selection. The unfortunate downside of such strategies, at least for those interested in gender equality, are that they act to reinforce traditional gender roles rather than using these high profile opportunities to underscore that women can hold a variety of diverse policy interests and goals.

For Bill Clinton an opposite trend may develop over the course of the campaign. As he engages in more partisan attacks on Trump and the GOP ticket his negatives should rise even further as Republican voters start to associate him even more strongly with the views of Hillary Clinton. Moreover, Bill Clinton’s missteps during the Democratic presidential campaign are a reminder that his campaign skills are not what they once were and that he can often serve as a distraction from the core message that Hillary Clinton wants to communicate to the public.

One thing is clear, as the 2016 presidential election continues to unfold public reactions to these history making spouses will be one of the most intriguing aspects of this campaign. It is already shaping up to be a very nasty campaign that will focus on the negative attributes of each candidate and for better or worse it does not appear that their spouses will be able to remain above the fray whether they like it or not.

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Opioid Crisis is Really a Crisis of Compassion

Yesterday I found myself in an odd discussion – I was trying to imagine under what circumstances I would tell a patient that I simply couldn’t treat them because I had reached my quota of 100 heart procedures and they were number patient 101. It was in discussion with a fellow physician, Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), who posed the hypothetical scenario as part of a town hall panel which I moderated for the Coalition To Stop Opioid Overdose.

I was in the U.S. Capitol to advocate on behalf of the millions of families who are struggling with the disease of addiction, the loved ones of those we have lost and the millions more in recovery who deserve support. I happily joined stakeholders as we met with lawmakers to persuade final passage of the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA). The House recently overwhelmingly passed its version of the Senate bill and soon the two chambers confer to comprise on a final version to send to the White House to be signed into law. CARA will set aside money for opioid addiction treatment, allow the government to grant money for addiction prevention, and increase countermeasures for overdose – our leading cause of accidental death.

Senator Ed Markey (D-Massachusettes) gave me an even deeper understanding of Dr. Rand’s hypothetical rationing challenge. He was struggling to keep the provision in the CARA bill that raises the limit of prescriptions a physician could write for buprenorphrine – a vital tool for weaning patients off opiates. The Senate version raised the limit from an arbitrary 100 prescriptions per doctor set in 2000. The version the House passed did not address the cap. Of all the points that must be part of comprehensive addiction reform, this is both the easiest and most urgent. But apparently, according to the Congressional Budget Office, raising the cap would cost money that was unaccounted for, a no-no in modern law making. By raising the cap, more patients could get care, which would cost money. The reality that money would also be saved by avoiding addictive behaviors including overdoses that cause expensive hospitalizations is amazingly not part of the cost analysis. Figuring out how to pay for care is routine for Congress. Deciding how many people are entitled to care even if they can pay should not be the burden of non-medical elected officials.

What is the big deal with buprenorphine? Unlike methadone, buprenorphrine was easily administered by a primary care physician and could be a discreet office based solution. But the DATA 2000 law required physicians to take an eight-hour course in order to earn permission to treat up to 100 patients with buprenorphrine. Patient 101 would be turned away. This made no sense – would it be conceivable to tell the 101st cancer patient that they could not have their treatment because you had reached your official quota? No other prescription or medical treatment has such a limit. As a physician, the thought of turning away any person who needs treatment and is at risk of dying is counterintuitive to everything we are taught. Yet DATA 2000 did exactly that. What was behind this thinking?

Like methadone, buprenorphrine can be abused. Lawmakers were concerned about patients taking too much or re-selling the drug, a process called diversion. But since 2000, technology has improved making diversion more difficult. Implantable pumps similar to insulin pumps can prevent abuse and a soon to be approved implant will slowly release enough drug to stop cravings. With the tripling of drug overdoses since 2000, we should re-visit this flawed rationing.

A quota on medical treatment of any other kind for any other disease would never be tolerated by the public. But addiction is different. Addiction is a disease that hurts others as well as the patient. Addiction frequently involves crimes or violence. It’s the only medical condition for which there are mandatory prison sentences. Addiction has been synonymous with the marginalized and disenfranchised fringe of society, viewed as the moral failure of a lost ungrateful soul. The patient cap is allowed to flourish in plain sight because we didn’t want “those people” at doctor’s offices in our neighborhoods getting an undeserved second chance.

But medicine has evolved in our understanding of addiction’s pathology, and so too must our acceptance of those who suffer as equals in need of treatment, deserving of care and possessing the hope and potential to get better. The vast majority of people addicted to opioids do not want to be addicts. Seeing someone struggling through a craving and getting “dope sick” is utterly heart wrenching. It is unthinkable to not help them. Yet imposing a limit on how many patients can be treated raises their risk of failure while guaranteeing they feel like one. Often it ends in their death.

It’s easy to do the right thing here. We need to remove the cap on buprenorphine prescriptions. We need to start saving lives with tools we know work instead of
making it harder for those fighting addiction to succeed and survive. Most importantly we need to see the life of a person with opioid dependence as more worth saving than the cost of the medicine. Comprehensive reform means acknowledging “new normals.” CARA’s new normal is that people struggling with addiction can get better and deserve to get better. “Those people” are no longer our lowest common denominator to be punished and discarded; rather they are part of us and sit at our family dinner tables. CARA might not end our opioid crisis, but it would definitely help end our crisis of compassion. Lets lose the cap.

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Algae: Saving Plants From Themselves To End World Hunger

Are the proteins and enzymes in algae the key to world hunger?World hunger is an increasing concern. Now scientists at Carnegie think they may have found the key to possibly alleviating some of those worries through a protein and enzyme commonly found in algae. Find out what they are, how they work and what impact they could have on feeding the masses by reading further.

Revenge Is Not Sweet for Adulterers' Wives

When you discover your husband’s affair, you might feel the urge to take violent revenge upon the cheating cad. At the very least, there is a strong temptation to whack him in the face with a heavy object or destroy his prized possessions. An adulterer’s wife might also fantasize about stabbing his floozy in the heart or punching her in the face. However, in most of the Western world, adultery is allowed yet physically attacking your spouse or his mistress might cause you a few inconvenient legal problems.

In the movies, revenge is sweet. In real life, that’s not necessarily the case. The desire for revenge can be a very toxic emotion that keeps you bound to all the negative effects you’ve suffered from his infidelity. Seeking vengeance can lead to endless hatred and bitterness–it never brings back what you have lost. It is easy to smash something up, but takes a lot longer to rebuild it. Out of revenge, you may do something you later sorely regret, but by then it may be too late to fix.

I heard a case of a psychiatrist who was having an affair with a former patient. In a fit of rage upon finding out, his wife reported him and the man was struck off. Losing his medical license meant that her husband lost his practice and most of his income. The wife received a far lower alimony and divorce settlement than she would have been able to claim had she not turned her spouse in. Perhaps the man deserved to be struck off for what he had done. Nevertheless, some might say that the psychiatrist’s wife had cut off her nose to spite her face, acting out of revenge rather than good sense.

In the book David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits and the Art of Battling Giants, Malcolm Gladwell discusses a situation considerably more devastating than an unfaithful husband or a failing marriage–dealing with the murder of a child. He contrasts the lives of parents who have taken the revenge route, often characterized by broken marriages and lifelong suffering, with those who have tried to move past and let go of the pain of losing their child, even attempting to forgive the murderer. A famous aphorism from the New Testament illustrates the importance of forgiveness within Christianity: “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do;” says Jesus while he is suffering on the Cross. Quite an improvement on the “eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth” revenge model (from King Hammarabi’s code of ancient Babylon), don’t you think?

The Dalai Lama is another spiritual leader who takes a strong stance against revenge. He advocates and genuinely practices compassion towards the Chinese government whose armed forces have oppressed, imprisoned, tortured and killed his people.

So if the parents of a murdered child, Jesus on the Cross, and Tibetan monks tortured by the Chinese can forgive, how about trying to forgive your wayward spouse and his girlfriends? Even if you’re an agnostic or an atheist, rolling your eyes at the mention of Jesus and religion, at least consider the value of trying to come to terms with your circumstances and finding a way to be at peace with yourself.

The bottom line is this: Why waste mental space thinking about how to take revenge on your husband and/or his mistress, rather than putting your focus on how to make your source of happiness and fulfillment independent of the pair of them? The best revenge you can take is to move past the need for it. Easier said than done, of course, but it’s still very much worth striving for.

According to certain schools of Tibetan Buddhism, if you’re guilty of sexual misconduct in your current life, in your next reincarnation you’re likely to have a promiscuous, hostile and ugly spouse who also has committed sexual misconduct in a previous life. Thus, as far as revenge is concerned, perhaps you can content yourself with the possibility that both your husband and his floozy will be unhappy and hideous to behold in their next lives. However, what Buddhists deem to be sexual misconduct varies considerably from one sect to another. Nevertheless, if there’s a person you’ve come across who really looks like the back of a bus, at least now you have some idea of what he or she may have done to deserve it.

Penis captivus is another fine form of revenge that might visit a couple committing adultery, at least that’s the claim of a German manual of gynecology published in 1933. The author Walter Stoeckel theorizes that during illicit sex, the fear of discovery can increase the force of the woman’s vaginal spasm, trapping the man’s engorged member inside her. So does penis captivus really exist or is it just a popular myth? William Kremer reported on this fascinating phenomenon for the BBC World Service in February 2014. Many doctors have heard about copulating couples getting stuck together at least for a few seconds. There are also documented cases of penis captivus resulting in hospital admissions, although this condition is rare. It certainly gives a new twist to the expression, “I’m stuck on you.”

Adapted from C. J. Grace’s new book, Adulterer’s Wife: How to Thrive Whether You Stay or Not, available on Amazon.com. Visit C. J.’s website, adultererswife.com and follow her on Twitter: twitter.com/cjgraceauthor/

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Chime Will Make You The Perfect Cup Of Chai Tea

Chime chai tea makerAll chai tea isn’t created equally. Sure, you’ve probably had chai tea
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pre-brewed version, and like most things, authentic is simply better. The
Chime, similar to a Keurig, simplifies the brewing process, while still
giving you an authentic cup of chai tea, quickly and easily.

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Inflatable Electric Sea-Doos Need to Exist in Adult Sizes

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Everything you need to know from Google IO 2016

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Oculus locks out Vive users with new DRM

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