Current:Home > MarketsYoung women are more liberal than they’ve been in decades, a Gallup analysis finds-VaTradeCoin
Young women are more liberal than they’ve been in decades, a Gallup analysis finds
View Date:2025-01-08 16:12:53
WASHINGTON (AP) — Young women are more liberal than they have been in decades, according to a Gallup analysis of more than 20 years of polling data.
Over the past few years, about 4 in 10 young women between the ages of 18 and 29 have described their political views as liberal, compared with two decades ago when about 3 in 10 identified that way.
For many young women, their liberal identity is not just a new label. The share of young women who hold liberal views on the environment, abortion, race relations and gun laws has also jumped by double digits, Gallup found.
Young women “aren’t just identifying as liberal because they like the term or they’re more comfortable with the term, or someone they respect uses the term,” said Lydia Saad, the director of U.S. social research at Gallup. “They have actually become much more liberal in their actual viewpoints.”
Becoming a more cohesive political group with distinctly liberal views could turn young women into a potent political force, according to Saad. While it is hard to pinpoint what is making young women more liberal, they now are overwhelmingly aligned on many issues, which could make it easier for campaigns to motivate them.
Young women are already a constituency that has leaned Democratic — AP VoteCast data shows that 65% of female voters under 30 voted for Democrat Joe Biden in 2020 — but they are sometimes less reliable when it comes to turnout.
Young women began to diverge ideologically from other groups, including men between 18 and 29, women over 30 and men over 30, during Democrat Barack Obama’s presidency. That trend appears to have accelerated more recently, around the election of Republican Donald Trump, the #MeToo movement and increasingly successful efforts by the anti-abortion movement to erode abortion access. At the same time, more women, mostly Democrats, were elected to Congress, as governor and to state legislatures, giving young women new representation and role models in politics.
The change in young women’s political identification is happening across the board, Gallup found, rather than being propelled by a specific subgroup.
Taylor Swift’s endorsement Tuesday of Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, after her debate against Trump, illustrated one of the issues where young women have moved to the left. In Swift’s Instagram announcing the endorsement praised Harris and running mate Tim Walz for championing reproductive rights.
The Gallup analysis found that since the Obama era, young women have become nearly 20 percentage points more likely to support broad abortion rights. There was a roughly similar increase in the share of young women who said protection of the environment should be prioritized over economic growth and in the share of young women who say gun laws should be stricter.
Now, Saad said, solid majorities of young women hold liberal views on issues such as abortion, the environment, and gun laws.
Young women are “very unified on these issues ... and not only do they hold these views, but they are dissatisfied with the country in these areas, and they are worried about them,” she said. That, she added, could help drive turnout.
“You’ve got supermajorities of women holding these views,” she said, and they are “primed to be activated to vote on these issues.”
___
Associated Press writer Laurie Kellman in London contributed to this report.
veryGood! (2314)
Related
- More than 150 pronghorns hit, killed on Colorado roads as animals sought shelter from snow
- 11-year-old boy charged with killing former Louisiana city mayor, his daughter: Police
- Elton John Shares Severe Eye Infection Left Him With Limited Vision
- School bus hits and kills Kentucky high school student
- Vegas Sphere reports revenue decline despite hosting UFC 306, Eagles residency
- Rapper Eve Details Past Ectopic Pregnancy and Fertility Journey
- 22 Ohio counties declared natural disaster areas due to drought
- Actor Ed Burns wrote a really good novel: What's based on real life and what's fiction
- Arbitrator upholds 5-year bans of Bad Bunny baseball agency leaders, cuts agent penalty to 3 years
- Iowa Lt. Gov. Adam Gregg resigns ‘to pursue a career opportunity,’ governor says
Ranking
- The NBA Cup is here. We ranked the best group stage games each night
- UGA fatal crash survivor settles lawsuit with athletic association
- JD Vance’s Catholicism helped shape his views. So did this little-known group of Catholic thinkers
- Man plows into outside patio of Minnesota restaurant, killing 2 and injuring 4 others
- Charles Hanover: A Summary of the UK Stock Market in 2023
- Notre Dame, USC lead teams making major moves forward in first NCAA Re-Rank 1-134 of season
- Lip Markers 101: Why They’re Trending, What Makes Them Essential & the Best Prices as Low as $8
- Israelis go on strike as hostage deaths trigger demand for Gaza deal | The Excerpt
Recommendation
-
Lost luggage? This new Apple feature will let you tell the airline exactly where it is.
-
Rapper Eve Details Past Ectopic Pregnancy and Fertility Journey
-
Elton John shares 'severe eye infection' has caused 'limited vision in one eye'
-
New York man gets 13 months in prison for thousands of harassing calls to Congress
-
Research reveals China has built prototype nuclear reactor to power aircraft carrier
-
Target brings back its popular car seat-trade in program for fall: Key dates for discount
-
Will Tiffani Thiessen’s Kids follow in Her Actor Footsteps? The Saved by the Bell Star Says…
-
Workers without high school diplomas ease labor shortage — but not without a downside