Security moms During the
2004 presidential campaign, pundits started talking about the
security mom, which was deemed to be a powerful
voting bloc. Security moms were supposed to be concerned primarily with issues such as the
war in Iraq,
domestic terrorism, and the security of their children. There is evidence, however, that security moms did not exist in great enough numbers to influence the 2004 election outcome.
Democratic women tended to be most interested in
healthcare, which Democratic front runner
John Kerry abandoned as a talking point, and may explain Kerry's difficulty in garnering their support.
Hockey mom Hockey mom is a term widely used in
Canada and
northern United States (including
Alaska), in which mothers often take their children to
hockey rinks. The first article in
The New York Times that used "hockey mom" as a demographic term was a 1999 review of the
Chevrolet Silverado, a
full-size pickup truck. In the article, the truck is described as a "smooth and gutsy" vehicle that "ought to please everyone from hockey mom to cattle hauler". Former Alaska governor
Sarah Palin, the US
Republican vice-presidential candidate in 2008, described herself as a "hockey mom" as far back as her
2006 gubernatorial race. In her speech at the
2008 Republican National Convention and in
stump speeches following the
convention, she joked that the only difference between a hockey mom and a
pit bull was lipstick, suggesting that hockey moms are tough. "Hockey partisans" on the Internet claim that hockey moms are "a bit more intense than their soccer counterparts, both in terms of the commitments they make to the sport and the intensity with which they cheer their kids." ==See also==