Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at New York University's Stern School of Business, said Tuesday on MSNBC's “The Lead Out” that young men “feel like they're not being noticed” by the Democratic Party.
Galloway said, “What's unusual about this conversation is that we thought this election was going to be a referendum on women's rights and bodily autonomy, but VP Harris has likely secured the vote of young women. Joy, I think this election will ironically be about whose vision of masculinity wins. A lot of young men are not drifting to the Republican Party. Your network has told very compelling stories about the largest gender gap in history, but men are not drifting to the Republican Party; they are just as supportive of gender rights as any other group. They are leaving the Democratic Party because they feel they are not being recognized.”
He added, “If you look at the DNC's website, it clearly says who we serve, and they list 16 demographic groups. As far as I can tell, they cover about 75% of the population, and they don't particularly cover young men. So some people feel like they're not being seen. The Democratic Party is facing the same problem that a lot of colleges and DEI organizations are facing right now, which is, when you're explicitly advocating for 75% of the population, are you advocating and representing them, or are you discriminating against the other 25%? And we're never going to take a chance. With the infrastructure bill, 70% of new jobs will go to men who don't necessarily have a college degree, and they didn't want to talk about that.”
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