this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2025
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Economic concerns and growing disenchantment with both parties is draining support for Trump among Gen Z young men, a key bloc of support during the 2024 election

Male Gen Z voters are breaking with Donald Trump and the Republican party at large, recent polls show, less than a year after this same cohort defied convention and made a surprise shift right, helping Trump win the 2024 election.

Taken with wider polling suggesting Democrats will lead in the midterms, the findings on young men spell serious trouble for the Republican Party in 2026.

Younger Gen Z men, those born between 2002 and 2007, may be even more anti-Trump, according to October research from YouGov and the Young Men’s Research Project, a potential sign that their time living through the social upheavals of the Covid pandemic and not being political aware during the first Trump administration may be shaping their experience.

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[–] bunchberry@lemmy.world -4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

What's the relevance? The point of my post is that you are voting for a clearly right-wing party and the expectation that they will become left-wing is irrational. The existence of a spoiler effect does not negate this reality. It is incredibly incoherent to say, "we should vote in the right-wingers because we're afraid of the spoiler effect," then turn around and say that the right-wingers are "stupid' for not running left-wing candidates as a right-wing party. It makes no sense. If you think you should never vote for a left-wing party out of fear of the spoiler effect, then you are really conceding that a left-wing government is impossible in the USA under its current form, and only maybe hypothetically in the far future if we ever have a different form, maybe with RCV, would it be possible.

[–] Turret3857@infosec.pub 2 points 23 hours ago (1 children)
[–] bunchberry@lemmy.world -2 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago)

You are literally upset that I pointed out a giant contradiction in your worldview.

  • Position A: "I want a left-wing government."
  • Position B: "I should vote for politicians who want a left-wing government."

Yes, I hold both positions in my head simultaneously and you do not.