Young Women’s Political Shift: Substance or Trend?

The leftward surge driven by volatile forces.

Edy Zoo
5 min readSep 22, 2024

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Photo by Mirah Curzer on Unsplash

Thank you, Lydia Saad, Sarah Elizabeth Jones, and Sarah Fioroni, for offering a meticulous examination of the political realignment of young women. Your piece, Exploring Young Women’s Leftward Expansion, provides a critical snapshot of a demographic increasingly identifying as liberal, with their dissatisfaction across various societal issues swelling in intensity.

While the surface-level trends are clear, there is a question simmering beneath your analysis: What lies at the heart of this expansion, and does it carry the weight of genuine transformation?

It’s tempting to interpret these shifts as evidence of political evolution, a sure sign of progress; however, this assumption demands closer scrutiny. Yes, young women are indeed leaning leftward in increasing numbers, aligning with liberal ideologies across the environment, abortion, gun laws, and race relations.

Yet to conclude that this is the dawn of a newly empowered voting bloc would be premature, if not entirely misleading. Surface movements, even backed by a substantial quantitative shift, can easily be mistaken for genuine ideological realignment when, in fact, they might represent little more than ephemeral discontent wrapped in ideological garb.

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Edy Zoo

Edy Zoo is a social critic, theologian, and philosopher who writes about social subjects.