logo
How a Gen Z gender divide is reshaping democracy

How a Gen Z gender divide is reshaping democracy

Japan Times29-05-2025
South Korea's young women are expected to lead a broad political backlash against the main conservative party during the presidential election on June 3, punishing it for months of chaos.
Multitudes of young men, though, are unlikely to join them.
In democracies worldwide, a political gender divide is intensifying among Generation Z voters, with young men voting for right-leaning parties and young women leaning left, a break from prepandemic years when both tended to vote for progressives.
Recent elections spanning North America, Europe and Asia show this trend is either consolidating or accelerating, with angry, frustrated men in their 20s breaking to the right.
First-time South Korean voter Lee Jeong-min is one of them.
He says he will vote for the right-leaning Reform Party's candidate, Lee Jun-seok, on June 3. Lee, the candidate, vows to shut down the ministry of gender equality, speaking to an issue that resonates with men like Lee, the voter, who particularly resents that only men have to do military service.
"As a young man, I find this to be one of the most unfair realities of living in Korea. At the prime of their youth — at 21 or 22 years old — young men, unlike their female peers, are unable to fully engage in various activities in society because they have to serve 18 months in the military."
In South Korea, almost 30% of men age 18 to 29 plan to back the Reform Party compared with just 3% of young women, according to a Gallup Korea poll this month.
Overall, more than half of the men back right-leaning parties while almost half the women want the left-leaning Democratic Party candidate to win. The divergence shrinks for older age groups.
Political economist Soohyun Lee, of King's College London, said many young South Korean men felt unable to meet society's expectations: find a good job, get married, buy a home and start a family.
And they blame feminism, many believing that women are preferred for jobs. With negligible immigration in South Korea, Lee said, "women become the convenient scapegoat."
Angry young men
In South Korea and other democracies, Gen Z men are seeing an erosion of their relative advantage, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic — to the point where in a few countries, the gender pay gap among 20-somethings favors young women.
EU data shows one of them is France, where men age 18 to 34 voted in larger numbers for Marine le Pen's far-right party than women in last year's legislative elections.
A carnival float depicting an exchange between Gen Z and baby boomers, is presented ahead of the traditional Rose Monday Carnival parade in Cologne, Germany, on Feb. 25. |
REUTERS
In the U.K., where more young men than women vote conservative, males age 16 to 24 are more likely to be neither employed, nor in education than female counterparts, official data shows.
In the West, young men blame immigration as well as diversity programs for competition for jobs.
In Germany's general election in February, the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) won a record 20.8% of the vote, tugged along by an undercurrent of support from young men — though the leader of the party is a woman.
Men age 18 to 24 voted 27% for the AfD while young women ran to the other end of the political spectrum, voting 35% for the far-left Linke party, according to official voting data.
"A lot of young men are falling for rightwing propaganda because they're upset, they have the feeling they're losing power," said Molly Lynch, 18, a Berliner who voted for Linke, drawn by its stand on climate change and economic inequality.
"But it's actually losing power over women that wasn't actually equal in the first place."
The gender divide is not restricted to Gen Z, or voters born since the mid-to-late 1990s. Millennials, who are in their 30s and early 40s, have felt the winds of change for longer.
In Canada last month, men age 35 to 54 voted 50% for opposition conservatives in an election turned upside down by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on his northern neighbor. The Liberals, which had been braced for defeat, rode an anti-Trump wave back to power, thanks in large part to female voters.
"It tends to be men who have a bit more life experience and are now in that situation where they're saying, 'This isn't working out for me, and I want change,'" said Darrell Bricker, global chief executive of public affairs at polling firm Ipsos.
Nik Nanos, founder of Canadian polling outfit Nanos Research, agreed, saying social media was accelerating democracy's "angry young men symptom," especially in areas where blue collar jobs have dried up.
A forever war?
Trump's 2024 presidential campaign, which promised a manufacturing renaissance and attacked diversity programs, also resonated with young white and Hispanic men, but turned off young women, fueling the country's big political gender gap.
Roughly half of men age 18 to 29 voted for Trump, while 61% of young women went for his opponent, Kamala Harris. Young Black voters of both genders still overwhelmingly backed Harris.
In Australia, which went to the polls this month, the Gen Z war did not play out at the ballot box. There was no clear divergence, with compulsory voting perhaps helping to explain why radicalized gender politics have not taken root.
"It tends to iron out extreme ideas, ideologies," said political scientist Intifar Chowdury of Australian National University.
So how does the Gen Z war end?
Pollsters said it could drag on unless governments addressed core issues such as home affordability and precarious employment. One cited young men's health as another policy challenge, especially high suicide rates.
Lee, of King's College, said the divide could make consensus on over-arching tax and welfare reforms harder to achieve.
"If the future generation is ever so divided along the lines of gender and then refuses to engage with each other to build social consensus, I do not think we can successfully tackle these huge issues," she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Philippine and Indian navies begin first joint South China Sea patrols
Philippine and Indian navies begin first joint South China Sea patrols

Japan Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Japan Times

Philippine and Indian navies begin first joint South China Sea patrols

Indian Navy warships have begun patrolling areas of the disputed South China Sea with their Philippine counterparts for the first time, Manila's military said Monday. The two-day sail includes three Indian vessels and started Sunday, a day ahead of Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos' scheduled trip to New Delhi for talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Philippines has heightened defense cooperation with a range of allies over the past year after a series of clashes in the contested waterway. Beijing claims nearly the entirety of the South China Sea despite an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis. India's naval vessels arrived in Manila for a port visit late last week. The patrol "started yesterday afternoon, then it's ongoing up to this moment ... the activity at the moment is replenishment at sea," Lt. Col. John Paul Salgado said. While in India, Marcos is expected to sign pacts in such fields as law, culture and technology, according to Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary Evangeline Ong Jimenez-Ducrocq, but all eyes will be on any potential defense agreements. The Philippines has previously purchased BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles from India, a weapon which has a top speed of 3,450 kilometers per hour. India, which has engaged in border clashes with China in the Himalayas, is a member of what is known as the Quad, a group that includes fellow democracies the United States, Japan and Australia. Beijing has repeatedly alleged that the four-way partnership, first conceived by late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, was created as a way of containing China.

Billionaire Ong pleads guilty in Singapore gifting scandal
Billionaire Ong pleads guilty in Singapore gifting scandal

Japan Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Japan Times

Billionaire Ong pleads guilty in Singapore gifting scandal

A billionaire best known for bringing Formula One night racing to Singapore has pleaded guilty in relation to a scandal to supply one of the city-state's most senior politicians with luxury gifts. On Monday, 79-year-old Ong Beng Seng conceded that he abetted the lawmaker in obstructing the course of justice, while another charge was taken into consideration. Both charges related to offering S. Iswaran in 2022 a trip on his private jet to Doha, a stay at the Four Seasons there, and a return business class ticket worth S$5,700 ($4,422.3). The former transport minister was then the chairman of a steering committee for the F1 night race. Ong could be sentenced by a Singapore court as soon as Monday or at a later date. He faces up to seven years in jail and a possible fine. Court proceedings were earlier interrupted twice due to a fire alarm. Ong's lawyers asked the judge to take into consideration his medical condition in sentencing, recommending a jail sentence of six weeks with the admission of guilt. The prosecutor acknowledged as a mitigating factor Ong's cancer diagnosis. Singapore's worst graft scandal in decades has gripped the city-state, which has sought to build a global reputation for zero-tolerance for corruption. How the Malaysia-born tycoon is sentenced will also weigh on his control of a business empire that extends from the Southeast Asian financial hub to a luxury development in central London and resorts in the Maldives. Ong has a net worth of $1.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. In 2024, Iswaran was sentenced to one year in jail for obtaining gifts from Ong, which also included items like a Brompton bicycle and race tickets. Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, who won his first electoral test as premier in May, has warned lawmakers in the ruling People's Action Party to separate their public political position from private, professional or business interests, and be wary of potential conflicts. Ong retains a significant footprint in Singapore. His firm continues to run the annual Grand Prix night race, which he helped bring to the city in 2008 owing to a close friendship with former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone. A multiyear extension of the race contract agreed with Singapore's tourism board is slated to end by 2028. Hotel Properties was also granted initial approval to redevelop marquee assets at a key slice of Singapore's premier shopping belt Orchard Road in 2023, but has been looking to sell stakes in them, Bloomberg News reported earlier. A harsh sentence may make it harder to maintain control of his empire. The absence of a clear successor and a lack of active involvement by Ong's children in Hotel Properties make possible an outside takeover of the firm or a sale of its Orchard Road portfolio, analysts at DBS said in May. The firm's thinly traded stock has risen over 50% this year. Hotel Properties maintains ties with the likes of Singapore state investor Temasek. Ong in 2021 led a S$3.9 billion takeover of the property assets of media company Singapore Press Holdings in collaboration with two Temasek units, though Hotel Properties divested its stake in the consortium earlier this year. Temasek and Hotel Properties also each control a 30% stake in a joint venture overseeing a major mixed-use development in London now known as Bankside Yards.

Stocks in Japan slump after U.S. data spark growth worries
Stocks in Japan slump after U.S. data spark growth worries

Japan Times

timean hour ago

  • Japan Times

Stocks in Japan slump after U.S. data spark growth worries

Japanese stocks fell after the latest U.S. jobs data raised concern over the world's largest economy. Banks and exporters led declines after the yen rallied against the dollar on speculation the Federal Reserve will cut rates. The broader Topix Index and the blue-chip 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average fell at least 2% in early trade, their largest intraday declines since April 11. The yen advanced 0.2% against the dollar before paring some gains to trade around ¥147.89 as of 10:30 a.m. The Japanese currency had surged more than 2% on Friday. The latest U.S. employment report showed the steepest downward revisions to jobs growth since the COVID-19 pandemic, with nonfarm payrolls being marked down by nearly 260,000 in May and June combined. The S&P 500 sank the most since May while the dollar snapped a six-day gain. "With this kind of data, investors will be worrying not about the possibility of a recession, but that we might already be in one,' said Kazuhiro Sasaki, head of research at Phillip Securities Japan. "That's being reflected in the weakening of the dollar and negative sentiment around stocks.' Banking shares were major losers Monday, with the Topix's gauge of lenders down as much as 4.4%, its biggest plunge since April 11. A murkier economic outlook in the United States will likely dampen expectations for a near-term Bank of Japan rate hike, weighing on banks' shares, said Sasaki. Overnight index swaps are pricing in a 34% chance of a rate hike by October, down from 43% on Friday. The drop in Japanese equities comes on the eve of the one-year anniversary of last August's market meltdown. The benchmark Topix plunged the most since 1987 on Aug. 5, 2024, following the BOJ's unexpected interest rate hike, coupled with economic concerns in the U.S. Before Monday's fall, the gauge had recovered about 30% since. "The situation is quite different from this time last year,' said Phillips' Sasaki. "Domestic demand-driven stocks still look solid,' with many investors expecting a boost in consumer spending if Japan's ruling parties concede to opposition calls for tax cuts following their recent election defeat, he added. Domestic-focused sectors like real estate, land transport and retail outperformed Monday, also helped by the stronger yen. Japan is in the middle of an earnings season, with the nation's biggest bank Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, as well as Sony Group and auto exporter Toyota, expected to report this week. "The rapid strengthening of the yen and weaker U.S. data imply tougher times ahead for large cap exporters,' though domestic-demand oriented small caps may benefit from a stronger currency, said Jamie Halse, chief executive officer at Senjin Capital. "When the U.S. sneezes, the world catches a cold, so I would expect increased caution amongst equity investors.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store