
There were wide gaps across the two major parties: 55% of Democratic members and 34% of Republican members made posts about the topic. In both parties, the shares of women who discussed sexual misconduct on Facebook were 30 percentage points larger than the shares of men who did so.

Posts about sexual misconduct did not dominate lawmakers’ Facebook outreach during this period, but they did reflect a gender gap in what members of Congress addressed on social media. Among all Facebook posts by female lawmakers, 2.9% discussed sexual misconduct, while just 0.8% of all posts by male legislators mentioned the topic. This gap held true across party lines. Democratic men in Congress posted on the subject in 0.9% of posts, compared with 0.7% for Republican men. But Democratic women posted about it in 3.2% of posts, while the subject accounted for 1.8% of the posts created by Republican women. This pattern is consistent with surveys of the U.S. public, which show that women are more likely than men to see online harassment as a “major problem,” while both women and Democrats are more likely to say that sexual harassment allegations reflect widespread problems in society.
Women and Democrats in Congress also posted about sexual misconduct sooner than did men and Republicans. By Nov. 1, 28% of female legislators and 23% of Democrats had posted about sexual misconduct, while just 9% of men and 5% of Republicans had done so. By Dec. 1, 62% of women and 45% of Democrats had posted about misconduct, versus 30% of men and 29% of Republicans. Facebook posts about the sexual misconduct issue spiked in December as the issue drew increasing attention.

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