The United States has more cases of COVID-19 than any other nation, yet many Americans, including President Donald Trump, have ignored or challenged directives meant to contain the virus. For example, in response to criticisms levied by the Democratic governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, against the administration's handling of the pandemic, President Trump told voters she was “way in over her head,” later calling on them to “LIBERATE MICHIGAN!”Footnote 1 Protests opposing Whitmer's stay-at-home orders followed, and social distancing declined. Meanwhile, Whitmer's southern neighbor, Ohio Republican governor Mike DeWine, enacted similar stay-at-home-policies, yet he saw relatively little backlash. However, Dr. Amy Acton, Ohio's director of health, who appeared with Governor DeWine at daily press conferences, garnered national attention and saw protests outside her home.
The experiences of Governor Whitmer and Dr. Acton are not unique. Across the country, female politicians have faced backlash for stay-at-home-policies encouraging social distancing.Footnote 2 While nearly all 50 states have implemented some restrictions, there is noticeable state-by-state variation in the degree of compliance. Why, if state governments have introduced relatively similar policies, do we see such variation in citizen response to stay-at-home orders?
We argue that one factor driving compliance with social distancing policies is the politics of gender resentment. Resentment captures the idea a group is getting more than it deserves (Kinder and Sanders Reference Kinder and Sanders1996). Gender resentment is an expression of hostile sexism (Glick and Fiske Reference Glick and Fiske1996) that does not necessarily emphasize biological inferiority but instead sees women as figures who have attained their status less through their own efforts and more through special treatment and unequal application of rules (Banks and Valentino Reference Banks and Valentino2012; Jennings Reference Jennings2006).Footnote 3 These hostile attitudes toward women “cutting men out” and not “knowing their place” lead to anger, mistrust, and lower evaluations of female leaders (Masser and Abrams Reference Masser and Abrams2004; Valentino, Wayne, and Oceno Reference Valentino, Wayne and Oceno2018). Gender resentment, similar to racial resentment, has grown in the last four decades, based on a common perception that “gender equality . . . [was] more or less achieved” and increasing competition between men and women over economic and political opportunity (Jennings Reference Jennings2006, 210). Resentment, which is exacerbated by anger and fear, would be heightened by the uncertainty and ire associated with the pandemic (Banks and Valentino Reference Banks and Valentino2012).
We argue that female leaders, faced with gender resentment, will find citizens less willing to comply with state mandated stay-at-home orders. Stay-at-home-policies designed to encourage social distancing require high levels of public trust and belief in government policy, as the benefit to most people is essentially invisible, while the costs are great (Hetherington and Globetti Reference Hetherington and Globetti2002). The uncertainty, fear, and anger surrounding the pandemic should both exacerbate gender resentment and erode the trust in female leaders. In turn, the willingness of citizens to comply declines drastically and, under the highest levels of gendered animosity, may incentivize some not to comply as a form of protest.
Gender resentment should not be taken as given; there is high variance in gender resentment across the states. We expect that male and female-led states with low gender resentment to have similar levels of compliance. Indeed, under certain circumstance, female leaders may be more effective at responding to the pandemic (Shay Reference Shay2020). It is only when resentment leads to distrust and political animus that we expect compliance to decline for female leaders.
DATA AND METHODS
To explore the role of gender resentment in compliance with social distancing policies, we use (1) geolocation data from SafeGraph, (2) survey data from the 2016 American National Election Study (ANES),Footnote 4 (3) the timing and location of government-sanctioned stay-at-home policies, and (4) the number of COVID-19 cases per state relative to the total population.Footnote 5 We also measure whether a majority of the state voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election, the gender and political affiliation of each state's governor, and the gender of the state-level health director.Footnote 6
To measure stay-at-home compliance, we rely on anonymized data from SafeGraph Inc. covering daily movements between January 1 and May 22, 2020. These data allow for the analysis of movement of a large, representative sample of Americans (Chen and Rohla Reference Chen and Rohla2018). From this data, we measure social distancing as:
Social Distances,t = Completely Homes,t/Total Device Counts,t – Workings,t
where Completely Homes ,t is the number of devices in state s on day t that never left home (see Painter and Qiu Reference Painter and Qiu2020).Footnote 7 Total Device Counts ,t is the total number of devices in state s on day t, and Workings ,t is the number of devices leaving home and going to another location for 3 to 10 hours during the period of 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. local time.Footnote 8 A higher percentage of Social Distances ,t indicates that more residents in the state are complying with stay-at-home orders. The average for Social Distances ,t is 31.5% across the entire sample, 28.6% before the state policy, and 37.9% after the state policy.
To measure gender resentment, we recreate the hostile sexism index using the 2016 ANES pre-election survey (Glick and Fiske Reference Glick and Fiske1996; Valentino, Wayne, and Oceno Reference Valentino, Wayne and Oceno2018), asking whether respondents agree that several innocent remarks are viewed as sexist: “women fail to appreciate what men do for them,” “women seek to gain power by getting control over men,” and “women put men on a tight leash.” The resulting index is rescaled to run between 0 and 1, with 1 indicating higher levels of gender resentment and 0 indicating lower levels of gender resentment. The inter-item correlation of the four measures ranges from .64 to .82, and the Cronbach's alpha is .92. This measure is aggregated to the state level to create a mean level of state gender resentment.Footnote 9
RESULTS
We examine whether gender resentment affects response to state-level social distancing orders using an ordinary least squares specification, with state and day random effects.Footnote 10 This approach allows us to assume a different baseline of social distancing for each state and date.Footnote 11, Footnote 12
Figure 1 presents the marginal effects of stay-at-home-policies (SHP) on social distancing for three variables: states that voted for Trump in 2016, female governors, and female health directors, controlling for the governor's party affiliation and the one-week lag in COVID-19 cases by state/population. Figure 1 shows SHP have a lower effect in states that voted for Trump, even controlling for the governor's party and the virus's spread. These results are consistent with previous work suggesting that state-level support for Trump is associated with fewer people staying home (Painter and Qiu Reference Painter and Qiu2020). Interestingly, the effect of state policies is not consistent between female governors and health department directors, with policies having a negative effect on social distancing in states led by a female executive but a positive effect in states led by a female health director.
We explain this discrepancy by accounting for state-level gender resentment. Figure 2 presents the marginal effects of SHP on social distancing from a second model interacting gender resentment with the gender of the state leadership.Footnote 13 Panel 1 presents the marginal effects of SHP on social distancing by the governor's gender. In states with low-level gender resentment, SHP increase social distancing behavior by about 6%, with no significant difference between governors of different genders. However, as resentment increases, SHP become less effective in states with a female governor but more effective in states with a male governor.
Panel 2 presents the marginal effects of SHP on social distancing by the director of the state health department's gender. In cases of low-level state gender resentment, stay-at-home policies have a greater effect on social distancing behavior in states with a female director; however, the effect decreases as gender resentment increases, with female state health directors’ social distancing recommendations being least effective in states with high levels of gender resentment. Yet as resentment increases, male-led health department's policies become more effective than those of their female counterparts.Footnote 14, Footnote 15
CONCLUSION
During a pandemic, leadership and expertise are critical. Yet gender resentment and hostile sexism can make citizens less willing to abide by the rules and recommendations from their elected and appointed leadership. As state-level gender resentment increases, citizen compliance with stay-at-home policies implemented by female leaders declines. This is not just true of elected officials; nonpartisan directors of health witness the same decline in compliance as governors, with stay-at-home policies being less effective as gender resentment increases. However, when gender resentment is low female leaders are equally, if not more, efficacious, with no difference in the effect of SHP between male and female governors and a greater effect with female health directors. Here, gender resentment acts as an unseen barrier that mediates the efficacy of female leaders, even when society needs them the most.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X20000392.