Canada’s recent federal election suggests a growing gender divide in political preferences.

Polling indicated women voters leaned strongly toward the Liberals, while an increasing number of men — particularly younger men — gravitated toward the Conservatives.

This polarization was not simply a matter of partisan preference but reflected deeper social, cultural and economic realignments rooted in identity politics and diverging values.

The gender gap also mirrors patterns across western democracies, where far-right populist parties increasingly draw male support through nationalist, anti-immigration and anti-feminist narratives, while women — especially racialized and university-educated — opt for progressive parties promoting equality and social protection.

  • HellsBelleOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    628 days ago

    You may want to make that sentence personal to yourself instead of pointing at others.

    • Daniel Quinn
      link
      fedilink
      English
      128 days ago

      You posted an article with a misleading headline suggesting that the Prime Minister is elected by Canadians at large — something objectively false, and you’re suggesting that I’m the ignorant one.

      • @Jack_Burton@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        1128 days ago

        Right. Every time Poilievre or Smith screamed “Trudeau bad!” It was clearly meant towards Trudeau alone and didn’t refer to the Liberal Party as a whole. This headline is only misleading to pedants, the rest of us understand fully and I think you do too.

      • HellsBelleOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        728 days ago

        Canadians understand we vote for MPs and the PM is the leader of the party.

        Americans make the mistake of thinking otherwise.

        Does that mean you’re American then?