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Young men swung HEAVILY towards Democrats in the latest elections in VA, NJ and NYC. Republicans are probably done for.

Just months ago, it looked as if young men were drifting permanently rightward, leaving Democrats scrambling for a way to reach them. But this month’s elections told a more complicated story. Young men in America are navigating a political identity crisis shaped by broken promises: decades of war, a volatile economy, and a labor landscape transformed beyond recognition. Into that void stepped a cottage industry of opportunists selling grievance, control, and a darker sense of belonging. Democrats, for too long, seemed unable to imagine a future that included these young men at all.

But the latest elections in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York City suggest the party may have finally learned something. Instead of leaning into culture wars or abstract ideals, Democrats ran campaigns laser-focused (for once) on affordability - on the rising cost of simply trying to live a stable adult life. That message resonated with young men who are struggling, not unlike everyone else, under the weight of high housing costs, unstable careers, and a sense that independence is slipping out of reach.

The result: young men broke decisively for Democratic candidates. These elections showed they were never lost, only overlooked. When Democrats grounded their politics in the everyday pressures people actually face, young men found a place in the coalition - and a reason to believe again.
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FreddieUK · 70-79, M
A both well written and argued case. Even if you didn't like the argument, I can see no reason just to leave a laughing emoji, but no comment. 🤷‍♂
G7J2O · 36-40, MNew
@FreddieUK The person who sent a laughing emoji promptly blocked me after accusing me of not being American. (she said " I dont think your (sic) an American")
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
@G7J2O No loss for you, I think.
SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@G7J2O Maga does that
I think the electorate has a whole has been shaken. Neither party has the lock on great ideas, OR bad ones. Perhaps some are mesmerized into an almost cult like stake. Others are shaken by the polarization and lack of civility, decorum and the ability to discuss issues civilly. The US seems to have sadly lost the ability to work together across the aisle to achieve consensus.
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
<Party> is probably done for is something I've heard about either political party after pretty much every election since Barack Obama was elected. And I only start there because I didn't really follow politics at all before that point.
idontcareok · 70-79, M
amazing a non-American wrote this post and 2 non-Americans commented lol
@RedBaron And your tangent about voting rights suggests a reading comprehension issue on your part, or you just assumed you knew what was being discussed. Either is not great.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow It’s not a tangent considering your reference to the basis of citizenship.

And you might consider toning down the hostility and pedantry. They do the opposite of amplifying your intellect.
@RedBaron It is an irrelevant tangent because it literally has nothing to do with what is being discussed.


I don't coddle fools.
SumKindaMunster · 51-55, M
So whose account are you an alt for?
Dino11 · M
Major News Link?

@Dino11 Refusing to engage with the facts as always I see.
In other scientific polling news, Hillary Clinton still leads Trump by 20 points.
MasterLee · 56-60, M
Blue state elections. Seems extremely premature.
lpthehermit · 56-60, M
i see it as a referendum against the trump ego, nothing more. elections swing to both extremes like the pendulum of a clock
RedBaron · M
If the GOP doesn’t distance itself from people like Nick Fuentes, it will be well on its way to becoming the American Nazi party.
helenS · 36-40, F
@RedBaron I will never understand how that "MAGA" movement was able to highjack the time-honored Republican party, the party of Abraham Lincoln. When I was in the US, my principal supervisors were old-school Republicans. Very decent and honest men.
RedBaron · M
@helenS And some of those old-school principled Republicans and conservatives, including my Army veteran brother, have sworn off the GOP and become Democrats since Trump came along.
Lol! Youunger genocide with a blue face!
They swung? Back and forth in the uniparty?
No change. No hope. USA!
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RedBaron · M
@dancingtongue Then it might take a while. The Democrats have yet to nominate a strong female candidate.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@RedBaron I've followed Kamala Harris' career since she was a prosecutor for my county. She could have been a strong candidate. Biden did her no favors with her assignments as VP and his decision to run for re-election and then leaving her thrown into the chaos of being a last minute candidate without going through a normal primary & convention vetting.
RedBaron · M
@dancingtongue Shoulda woulda coulda.

But the biggest issue was that she was running against a political dynamo, like him or not.

Hillary had the same problem in 2016.
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SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@Torsten Mamdani got elected 🥰
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