
The Electability Myth
Why women candidates are winning—and changing what “electable” means
The Electorette Podcast · Electorette
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Show Notes
Why women candidates are winning—and changing what “electable” means
For years, politics has been shaped by assumptions about who is “electable”—assumptions that often sideline women candidates. But those assumptions are starting to fail.
In this episode, Jen Taylor-Skinner speaks with Jessica Mackler, President of EMILYs List, about what that shift looks like in real time, starting with Illinois Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton’s recent primary win.
Despite being outspent and underestimated, Stratton’s victory reflects a broader pattern: women candidates, including women of color, are winning competitive races—and doing so without the traditional advantages long seen as necessary.
They discuss how the idea of electability shapes funding, media coverage, and political strategy—and what happens when candidates succeed without fitting that mold.
This conversation examines how power is built, who gets backed, and how those dynamics are beginning to change.
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