The rapid increase in liberal identity among young women has led some to speculate that young men are moving in the opposite direction. Jean Twenge declared in her recent book, “Generations,” that the gender divide is going to become a defining feature of our politics. She writes: “Among liberals, the future is female and among conservatives, the future is male.” It’s an argument that offers compelling symmetry. Except that it’s not at all what we see in most polls.
As The Hill’s Daniel de Vise recently noted, even the data that Twenge cites shows that the overwhelming majority of teenage boys and girls identify as moderate. Other surveys tell much the same story. In a recent survey, we at the Survey Center on American Life found that the gender gap is most pronounced among political moderates, among whom young men are overrepresented by a considerable margin. More than 60% of young moderates among our respondents were men. Gallup polls stretching back more than two decades have consistently shown that the most common political identity among young men is moderate.
The overwhelming majority of teen boys and girls identify as moderate.
That young people would gravitate toward the political middle makes sense: They are being politically noncommittal as they figure out what they think and where they fit. For many young people, “moderate” can serve as a political placeholder as more stable partisan attachments develop.
Or the phenomenon could reflect feelings of political apathy. Even as young men readily share their thoughts about political matters, they are far less likely than young women to say these issues are priorities for them. On gun violence, climate change and racial inequality, young men express substantially less concern than young women.
One important reason the politics of young men is so difficult to pin down is that so few have participated in institutions that shape their values and help them identify their purposes. Young men today are far less likely than previous generations to have been raised in religious communities and participate less often in clubs and competitive sports. Membership in the Boy Scouts has fallen dramatically in recent years, as has participation in youth athletics. With fewer formative attachments and experiences, young men may take longer to figure out their places and find their voices.
Compared to young women, young men have also been less affected by recent political events. Young women have lived through a succession of seismic events, including the #MeToo movement, the election of Donald Trump and the overturning of Roe v. Wade, all of which profoundly shaped their politics. These events had far less influence on the politics of young men. The #MeToo movement was a defining experience for many young women, but young men often took little notice or evinced little awareness of its implications.








