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Nationwide, the gender gap appears smaller, but still yields a double-digit edge for Obama, other polling shows. The president had plenty of applause lines for the women surrounding him, including when he pointed out that women hold less than one-fifth of the seats in Congress. "Is it possible that Congress will get more done if there were more women in Congress?" he said to cheers. "Is that fair to say? I think it's fair to say." The White House is promoting its efforts across the government to help girls, working women and women in their retirement, on issues ranging from matters of health coverage to salary fairness to the prevention of domestic violence. Obama's aides point to efforts since the start of his administration, not just in this election year. The forum focused on the enormous challenges that remain, such as the underrepresentation of women in fields of science and technology. "When creativity is limited or ingenuity is discouraged," Obama said, "that hurts all of us." Obama said he thinks of the future of his two daughters when he starts work each day and that all of his efforts to help women are personal, as a man who has been shaped by strong women in his life. He said women make up 80 percent of his household if you count his mother-in-law
-- "and I always count my mother-in-law."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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