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Gen Z Women Are Moving Left. Young Men Aren’t.

The gendered political divide is transforming how young Americans are organizing, voting, and relating to one another.

Alice Scott

Today 9:00 am

Young men stand for the US national anthem during a 2024 campaign event for Donald Trump(Heather Khalifa / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Bluesky

Marina Martinez believes that little actions can make a difference. That’s part of why the University of Oregon sophomore joined her school’s chapter of Citizen’s Climate Lobby, a national organization dedicated to advocating for effective climate solutions in Congress.

Martinez, who is the group’s secretary, said the club is open to anyone on campus who’s interested in climate advocacy. Still, out of the group’s 25 regular members, none are men.

“There just seems to be a higher number of women who are eager to take actual day-to-day political action on the left-leaning side,” Martinez said.

Martinez’s observation might not solely apply to her club. Across the country, young women are becoming increasingly liberal. Their male counterparts, however, are not.

According to a Gallup Poll published in 2024, 40% of U.S. women aged 18-29 identified themselves as liberal—the highest percentage in decades. Comparatively, only 25% of men in that same age group identified as liberal.

​“It is just an enormous difference these days,” said Marc Hetherington, a political science professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies the dynamics of the American electorate.

​Hetherington said this political “gender gap” is largely driven by the behaviors of young women. Because young women are not only more liberal than young men—they’re more liberal than women of other generations by a long shot. And this trend is on the rise, according to past Gallup polls.

In the period from 2001-2007, an average of 28% of women aged 18-29 identified as liberal. Then, between 2008-2016, that average grew to 32%.

The most recent period of data—from 2017-2024—shows that 40% of young women in this age cohort identify as liberal. That’s a 12-point increase in 23 years.

“The below-30 women really stand out as being different from even women of older age cohorts,” Hetherington said.

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But young men have not followed the same pattern. Over the past 25 years, the percentage of men aged 18-29 who identify as liberal has fluctuated, but has generally hovered in the 20-30% range. In 2001, 25% of men in this age cohort were reported to have identified as liberal—the same percentage who identify as liberal now.

For Khasya Tinglin, a junior at the University of Texas at Austin, the numbers aren’t surprising. She’s a Rhetoric and Writing major, but studied International Relations during her first two years of college. Before she changed her major, she said she frequently noticed this divide in her classes.

In many of her required courses, which were often in the disciplines of political science and international relations, Tinglin said she found that male students were more likely to express conservative views. She said this became particularly noticeable when engaging in class discussions about current events and foreign conflicts.

“It was a very unempathetic and unemotional way of looking at the world,” Tinglin said. “There’s multiple perspectives when you’re looking at international relations. You can always do the state argument, but those are actual people’s lives.”

Hetherington said one possible reason for a growing political gender gap could be that support for many women’s issues—such as reproductive rights and gender equality—has become distinctly partisan. 

“In my generation, when we were young, there wasn’t a giant difference between the Republicans and Democrats on gender issues,” ​Hetherington said. “And to the extent that there was a difference, it was really kind of just opening up in the 1980s.”

One example Hetherington pointed to was the presidential election of 1976. During the race, both Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter and Republican candidate Gerald Ford were pro-life and expressed personal opposition to abortion. 

Just a few years prior, when the US Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade, it was Justice Harry Blackmun who authored the majority opinion, which held that a woman’s right to an abortion was protected by the right to privacy. Blackmun, along with four other justices in the 7-2 majority, was appointed by a Republican president. 

“These things have changed a lot, starting in the 1980s, but those types of changes take a while,” ​Hetherington said. “So, when we were being politically socialized, the choice between the parties was not that stark.”

But that political context is much different from the one that young women today grew up in, ​Hetherington said. Instead, they watched a conservative Supreme Court with a majority of Republican-appointed justices overturn Roe v. Wade

​Hetherington said other gender issues, such as women’s rights and equality initiatives, have also become more partisan in the past 20-30 years. Women, he said, are therefore more likely to flock to the party that supports these rights.

Maggie Oliver, a junior majoring in political science at Pace University, said gender issues such as reproductive health care access influenced why she became politically active. 

Oliver, who works on the campaign for Alex Flores, a Democratic candidate running for New York’s 12th Congressional District, is a registered Democrat and describes herself as left-leaning. She said this is shaped in part by her own personal experiences.

“Young men specifically have the luxury of not having to worry about a lot of the same things that I feel like I watched myself worry about growing up,” Oliver said. “I had to think about birth control when I was 15 years old just as healthcare for menstruation.”

But, Hetherington said that the Democratic Party’s focus on gender issues could be alienating young men. “There’s an old definition of politics that comes from a guy named Harold Laswell, and he defined politics as who gets what, when and how,” Hetherington said. “When men see what the Democratic party seems to be offering, as far as gender issues are concerned, they feel like there’s not much on offer for us.”

Partisan support for gender issues is likely not the only reason for a growing political gender gap. Education could also play a role.

Data from the Pew Research Center shows that since the late 1990s, US women have been outpacing men in receiving a college education.

Presently, 47% of women between the ages of 25 and 34 have a bachelor’s degree, compared to just 37% of men. Women surpass men in bachelor’s degree completion in every major racial and ethnic group, although the size of the gap varies. 

Surveys conducted by the Pew Research Center revealed that education is strongly associated with partisanship. The findings showed that adults who have completed a four-year college degree are significantly more likely to identify with the Democratic Party, suggesting that education could be contributing to young women’s leftward shift.

Hetherington asserts that the ideology of young men is also influencing elections. Indeed, Preston Hill, who was the president of UNC-Chapel Hill’s Young Republicans club during the 2025-26 academic year, said he thinks the male demographic is a secret weapon for candidates.

​Why? He points to the 2024 election.

​During the election, young men swung sharply to the right. According to an analysis by the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University, roughly 56% of men aged 18-29 voted for President Donald Trump in a stark reversal from 2020, when about the same amount supported Joe Biden. In comparison, 40% of young women in that same age group voted for Trump in 2024. 

This marked the first time that a majority of young male voters backed a Republican presidential candidate since the 1988 election of George H. W. Bush.

​According to Hill, this demographic of young men is one that has felt “left out” by the Democratic Party and dissatisfied with the Biden administration over issues like the economy and immigration. And during this period of discontent, Hill said conservatives provided young men with a seemingly better offer.

This was true for Kai Lindsey, a junior at UT-Austin. Lindsey said that he, alongside some of his male peers, felt “swept aside” by liberal ideologies that he believes are becoming more extreme.

“When it comes to things like affirmative action and hiring, some of that rhetoric definitely pushed me a little bit to see conservative ideology as more accepting or more caring for my personal issues,” Lindsey said.

​Hill said he particularly noticed gender being targeted during the 2024 presidential election. While Trump accepted the invitation to appear on Joe Rogan’s podcast, which has an audience primarily of young men, Kamala Harris did not. In contrast, she campaigned primarily with female influencers and touted an endorsement from Taylor Swift. 

​“In the end, I think it paid off more for Trump to be going after the younger men,” Hill said.

​Briana Edwards, a graduate research assistant at the Center for Innovation and Sustainability in Local Media, said the type of content young men consume, like Rogan’s podcast, is likely influencing their conservative slant. Much of the online content targeted towards young men, Edwards said, is part of the manosphere—an ecosystem of toxic male online communities, which ​she studied for her master’s thesis. This political content, she says, manipulates young men’s sense of being discounted by the political system, and gives them someone to blame: Women.

​“It’s misplaced blame,” Edwards said. “I’ve been articulating it as men are looking across at women. They’re looking horizontally versus looking vertically. They need to look up at systems that are acting on them, and look side to side at the women who are facing the same experiences they are in this country, but handling it.”

According to Edwards, there are several subgroups of the content that permeate the manosphere. Not all of it is inherently political. The ideologies that she’s studied within the manosphere include Christian nationalism, men’s rights activism, and anti-woke rhetoric, but Edwards said that even content that is not outwardly political tends to emphasize conservative values. Many of the ideas in the manosphere center around a desire to return to traditional gender norms and values. This longing for the past is something that Edwards said many Republican candidates leverage in their rhetoric.

“I think Trump, RFK, and the broader manosphere does that very well,” Edwards said. ‘Make America Great Again.’ ‘Make America Healthy Again.’ ‘Let’s return to traditional gender norms.’ I think people want to imagine a world where things could be better. But, instead of imagining or speculating about what the future could be, we look at what the past was—what we think it was. There’s that weaponization of nostalgia. I think both groups do it very well.”

As more and more young men consume this content, Edwards said they are becoming more disconnected from young women—both politically and socially. 

For some young adults, this is being reflected in their relationships. Lea Martin, a sophomore at the University of Oregon, said that political disagreements contributed to her decision to end a relationship with a romantic partner.

“He identified as a liberal, but didn’t actually vote in the [2024 presidential] election,” Martin said. “He didn’t put any action behind his words. It was just disappointing.”

Martin was raised in a politically active family. She attended her first protest at 8 years old and continued to participate in women’s marches and rallies defending the academy as she grew up. Now, she feels that her political views are more than just beliefs—they’re part of her value system. 

“I would say I’m definitely very liberal,” Martin said. “I think everyone deserves equal rights, and the environment deserves protection. I could never be that close with someone who doesn’t have my same ethos.”

A recent study from the University of California at Irvine found that 37% of Americans reported experiencing a “political breakup” with friends, partners or family members at some point in their lives. The research suggests the trend might be accelerating, particularly since the 2024 election.

This comes at a time when women are already staying single longer and delaying having children. Using Census Bureau historical data, Morgan Stanley has predicted that 45% of women ages 25-44 will be single by 2030—which would be the largest share in history.

Lindsey said he worries about what increasing division between young men and women could mean in the long term.

“With this growing ideological divide, when people are thinking about starting families, I think there’s a disconnect,” Lindsey said. “There’s a growing disconnect between husbands and wives, where the man may have a certain expectation of the wife that the wife does not want to adhere to or, or vice versa. I’m a big believer in the idea that getting married and having kids is an objectively good thing for the country. Seeing the ideological differences of men and women sort of butting heads with each other, I think, is a really bad sign.”

Rue Siddiqui, a junior at DePaul University in Chicago, said she also worries about growing polarization. That’s part of why she founded DePaul’s chapter of BridgeUSA, a student movement designed to fight political division by championing viewpoint diversity and responsible discourse.

The club meets twice a month to discuss a pre-selected topic, which in the past has included matters such as immigration, DEI initiatives, and local Chicago issues. During the discussions, Siddiqui says all viewpoints are welcome. An executive board moderates all conversations to ensure they remain productive.

And though Siddiqui has noticed that many of the members who discuss more conservative takes tend to be male students, she’s noticed something else, too. At the end of the meetings, all of the participants can leave not necessarily with their minds changed, but with a sense of mutual respect.  

Siddiqui said she hopes the same could eventually be true for young men and women. 

“When it comes to men and women, those differences might never go away,” Siddiqui said. “I’m not saying that they never will. But until we can talk to each other, nothing’s really going to change.”

Alice ScottAlice Scott is a 2026 Puffin student writing fellow for The Nation. She studies journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and has been published in PBS NewsHour, Texas Highways Magazine, and the Austin American-Statesman.


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