Skip to content Skip to search

Republish This Story

* Please read before republishing *

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free under an Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives Creative Commons license as long as you follow our republishing guidelines, which require that you credit The 19th and retain our pixel. See our full guidelines for more information.

To republish, simply copy the HTML at right, which includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to The 19th. Have questions? Please email partnerships@19thnews.org.

— The Editors

Loading...

Modal Gallery

/
Sign up for our newsletter

Menu

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact
Donate
Home

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Election 2024

Republican Eric Hovde blamed societal problems on single moms in his first Senate bid. Will he do it again?

Hovde is challenging Sen. Tammy Baldwin in a Wisconsin race that could help determine Senate control.

Eric Hovde announces he is for running U.S. Senate.
Eric Hovde, a Republican businessman and real estate mogul, announces he is for running U.S. Senate against Wisconsin Democratic incumbent Sen. Tammy Baldwin on February 20, 2024, in Madison, Wisconsin. (John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal/AP)

Amanda Becker

Washington Correspondent

Published

2024-03-20 13:43
1:43
March 20, 2024
pm

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Republish this story

Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin has drawn a high-profile Republican challenger in Wisconsin, Eric Hovde, who has a history of attributing societal problems to single parents and suggested curtailing economic programs that support mothers and children. 

Hovde, a wealthy bank owner and real estate developer, is the GOP establishment’s pick to challenge Baldwin in November. Many of Hovde’s statements about single-parent households were made during his first attempt at the Senate, in 2012. He said in a radio interview then that he was “very concerned where this country is heading socially and morally.”

“One of the most troubling statistics that I can quote is a social statistic: And that is, 4 out of 10 children born in America, they are born out of wedlock. That is a direct path to a life of poverty,” he continued. “I think we got to get our morals and our ethics back. And I think we got to, you know, get this country turned around.”

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Women, specifically millennial-aged suburban mothers, may play a determinative role in Wisconsin’s Senate race, which could impact which party controls the upper chamber. Hovde’s past rhetoric about single-parent households, the vast majority of which are headed by mothers, could be a liability in a political swing state where there are roughly 100,000 single moms heading households with minor children. Research shows that women are more likely than men to believe that being raised in a single-parent household does not have much of an impact on society. Younger Americans are more likely to agree than older people. 

Hovde’s campaign could not be reached to comment on his past statements, and it is unclear whether he will shift his rhetoric about single mothers and programs intended to support them during his second Senate bid. 

  • More from The 19th
    A photo collage of a mom leading a demonstration using a megaphone against a backdrop of an Instagram feed on a phone.
  • Is 2024 the year of the Instagram moms?
  • Tammy Baldwin has won big in closely divided Wisconsin. Can she do it again?

As Hovde, who has not held elected office, unsuccessfully competed in the earlier Republican Senate primary, he repeatedly talked about how raising children outside of marriage led to higher rates of depression, lower levels of educational achievement and higher incarceration rates. While children in single-parent households experience higher rates of poverty, the data to support Hovde’s other claims is either decades old, spotty or does not control for economic status. He also said, without offering evidence, that participants in the SNAP food program for low-income individuals and families were trading benefits for drugs at Disney World and in Las Vegas and that there was “massive amounts of food stamp fraud.” Hovde urged news organizations to stop covering SNAP beneficiaries as a “sob story” and instead focus on the federal deficit. 

Policymakers must “do everything we can to support the family unit, and we have to stop government policies that reward those that are having children out of wedlock and harming people that are having children in marriage,” Hovde argued during a 2012 primary debate. 

In 2017, Hovde made comments that played into negative and racist stereotypes about Black women. He said in an interview that social welfare programs were leading to out-of-wedlock births among Black women, which led to societal problems in urban communities. He added that it wasn’t a Black or White issue because the same dynamic also contributed to economic struggles in Appalachia and said that Indigenous families were hampered by a “quasi-Socialist” system on native land.  “Welfare … helped destroy those families,” he said. 

Nearly 24 million American children — or about 1 in 3 nationally — are from a single-parent family, including nearly 400,000 in Wisconsin, government data shows. Most of these single-parent families are headed by women. Black and Indigenous children are the most likely to live in single-parent families, followed by Latinx and multiracial kids. In 2021, about 30 percent of single parents were living in poverty, compared with about 6 percent of married couples. Single mothers are more likely to be poor than single fathers, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation, a philanthropic organization focused on the well-being of children and youth.

Shortly after Hovde’s first Senate attempt, research published by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center showed that 64 percent of U.S. adults said single mothers were a “big problem,” down from 71 percent five years before. In 2021, 47 percent agreed that “single women raising children on their own is generally a bad thing for society,” 43 percent said it made no difference and 10 percent said it was a good thing for society, according to another Pew study. 

Sign up for more news and context delivered to your inbox, daily

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting…

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

In the earlier study, Republicans were far more likely than Democrats or independent voters to say that childbirth outside marriage was a “big problem.” White Americans were more likely than those of other races or ethnicities to say it was a “big problem.” The 2021 research showed that 56 percent of men said single motherhood was bad for society versus 37 percent of women. Meanwhile half of women said being raised by a single mother didn’t impact society versus 34 percent of men. 

Single women, including single mothers, have become a Democratic-leaning voting bloc. In 2008, 74 percent of single moms supported Democrat Barack Obama over Republican John McCain. Four years later, Obama’s Republican challenger Mitt Romney softened his rhetoric about single mothers during the final weeks of the White House race, saying they were “living for something bigger than themselves,” after previously emphasizing the importance of two-parent families. It wasn’t enough for him to erode support for Obama among single mothers. 

Baldwin, who is running for her third term, has made mothers central to her organizing strategy. Hovde recently pledged that if elected he will donate his Senate salary to a Wisconsin charity. 

Recent statewide races in Wisconsin have been decided by increasingly small margins. Incumbent Republican Sen. Ron Johnson won his 2022 race against Democrat Mandela Barnes by a single percentage point, or fewer than 30,000 votes. In 2020, Democratic now-President Joe Biden beat Republican former President Donald Trump in Wisconsin by an even smaller margin. 

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Recommended for you

Photocollage of the U.S. Capitol on a red background.
Republicans win control of the Senate
Sen. Tammy Baldwin smiles as she speaks during an interview on Capitol Hill.
Tammy Baldwin has won big in closely divided Wisconsin. Can she do it again?
A photo collage of a mom leading a demonstration using a megaphone against a backdrop of an Instagram feed on a phone.
Is 2024 the year of the Instagram moms?
For the first time since 2011, the overall number of women serving in the Senate and House of Representatives will decline.
The 119th Congress: Some history makers, but fewer women overall

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

Explore more coverage from The 19th
Abortion Election 2024 Education LGBTQ+ Caregiving
View all topics

Support representative journalism today.

Learn more about membership.

  • Transparency
    • About
    • Team
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Community Guidelines
  • Newsroom
    • Latest Stories
    • 19th News Network
    • Podcast
    • Events
    • Careers
    • Fellowships
  • Newsletters
    • Daily
    • Weekly
    • The Amendment
    • Event Invites
  • Support
    • Ways to Give
    • Sponsorship
    • Republishing
    • Volunteer

The 19th is a reader-supported nonprofit news organization. Our stories are free to republish with these guidelines.