Challenging the right鈥檚 misogyny offensive

March 6, 2025
Issue 
A protest against gender-based violence in Gadigal Country/Sydney in July last year. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

While young people (Gen Z) are generally聽聽than post-war generations, there is a growing gender split as young men move further to the right, while young women veer left.

Reports show that young men are being聽. They were more likely than women to vote for Donald Trump in the United States, the latter overwhelmingly voting for Kamala Harris.

US exit polls showed that about 49% of male voters, aged 18鈥29, voted for Trump, and about 38% of women.

In the recent German elections,听. More young men voted for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

While an alarming 21% of 18鈥24-year-olds voted for the AfD, slightly more 鈥 25% 鈥 voted for Die Linke (The Left). Among this cohort, the traditional conservative and social democratic parties and the Greens received between 11鈥13% each.

Broken down by gender, 24% of men voted for the AfD, compared to 17% of women. Only 7% of men voted for Die Linke, compared to 10% of women.

Similar dynamics are emerging in Australia.聽聽32% of 18鈥34 year old men support the Coalition, compared to just 25% of women the same age.

Young women are also far more likely to support the Greens (32%) than young men (20%), while 36% of men favour Labor, compared to 32% of women.

What is going on?

The decline in living standards has taken place under both Labor and the Coalition鈥檚 neoliberal policies. Consequently, young people are looking for alternatives to the left and right.

One reason for young people鈥檚聽聽with the traditional big parties is their failure to provide the basics many of their parents enjoyed: free or nearly free education; and, compared to now, job and housing security.

Given that the far right is cashed up, and it can count on loyal聽lieutenants聽in the corporate media, its recruitment strategy is quite simple: it manipulates young people鈥檚 real fears about falling real wages, cost-of-living pressures and insecure work and housing into a blame game against migrants, women or anyone dubbed 鈥渨oke鈥.

Blame is never attributed to the real culprit 鈥 capitalism.

Globally, the far right is having success pushing its anti-immigration ideology, transphobia, racism and misogyny as reasons for people鈥檚 lives becoming harder.

This attack line is enabled by the traditional parties that, at least in Australia, have a shameful record of blaming small cohorts of asylum seekers for many social ills.

Marga Ferr茅, co-president of聽, 聽that the rise of the far right is driven by 鈥渂acklash by those who are losing their privileges, or fear losing them鈥.

As understanding grows about how聽patriarchy is intrinsic to capitalism,听as well as decolonial and anti-capitalist struggles, Ferr茅 suggests that the rise of the far right is a 鈥渞eaction, first and foremost (though not only)鈥 against feminism.

,听听补苍诲听聽write in their聽Feminism for the 99%聽that mass disillusion with the traditional parties of government makes anti-capitalist feminism 鈥渂ecome thinkable today鈥.

They argue that feminism for the 99% can only come about by connecting anti-racists, environmentalists, labour and migrant rights activists to 鈥渞ise to the challenge of our times鈥.

The dots are being connected by a younger generation, which is why the far-right is pushing back with an anti-feminist agenda that draws on entrenched patriarchal and misogynist ideas.

Social media pushes misogyny

Big Tech鈥檚 predatory social media platform algorithms are also pushing far-right propaganda.

Research by the US聽聽found that the far right had used social media to 鈥渟hift public rhetoric from embracing diversity to a homogenous society where 鈥 a country rooted in immigrants is closing doors on immigration鈥.

It said social media platforms X and TikTok were聽聽supporting the AfD, among other far-right content, ahead of the German elections.

It found that 74% of political content on TikTok ahead of the elections was right-leaning, as was 72% on X and 59% on Instagram. The platforms even pushed pro-AfD and far-right content from accounts users do not follow.

This is unsurprising, given that the platforms are controlled by Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg 鈥 the richest people in the world and beacons of toxic masculinity.

Lynnette McIntire, from聽,听said this misogynistic language and messaging is resonating with young men. The 1970s 鈥淥ur Bodies, Our Choice鈥 pro-choice campaign battle cry had been inverted by misogynist influencers in the US elections to 鈥淵our Body, My Choice鈥.

McIntire said a 鈥済et back to the kitchen鈥 movement was promoting the so-called 鈥渢rad wife鈥 role and even using social media to call for the repeal of women鈥檚 right to vote.

This movement says聽men are being 鈥渙ppressed鈥 because they have lost their 鈥渟tatus鈥 due to laws promoting equality.

Women are also being blamed for: men鈥檚 lower levels of education compared to women; job opportunities lost to diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives; and being asked for 鈥渙nerous鈥 childcare support.

Popular culture is now rife with misogynistic tropes and social media turbocharges its impact.

Online gender-based violence is also on the rise, with聽聽from 2018鈥21 showing between 1658% of women have experienced it.

The far right also uses alternative media, such as聽,听to recruit young men to its movement.聽The Joe Rogan Experience,聽the third most popular podcast in the US on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, provides far-right influencers like Andrew Tate and Jordan Peterson with a platform. Men make up 80% of its listeners.

Young women more progressive

While young men are being drawn to the far right, young women are more concerned about abortion rights, LGBTIQ rights, racism, unemployment and the rising聽cost of living.

For many Gen Z women, the #MeToo movement, which exposed the extent of rape culture and misogyny, also helped them understand how patriarchy upholds capitalism鈥檚 structural inequality.

The #MeToo movement聽聽around the world. The far-right push back, with the scrapping of the US鈥 main abortion law, has been building since then.

Long way to go

Women鈥檚 rights are also being eroded, because laws stipulating equality are either not being enforced, or are being weakened.

Women are still聽聽than men across the board, with female-dominated professions paid substantially less than male-dominated ones.

罢丑别听聽of unpaid care and household work is still being carried out by women. This work is estimated to be valued at $650 billion in Australia, more than half of gross domestic product.

The ABC聽聽last July that female teachers and students are facing increasing misogynistic behaviour in schools, including sexist remarks, sexual harassment and threats of violence.

A devastating 101 women were killed last year, according to聽. At least 11 women have already been killed this year.

罢丑别听聽found that one in six women had experienced physical or sexual abuse at the hands of a partner, since the age of 15. One in four had experienced emotional abuse.

It also found that one in five women had experienced sexual violence.

Most young people believe in equality and oppose attacks on women鈥檚 rights, but a small section is being won over by the misogynistic ideas perpetuated online.

However, with Trump in the White House, the misogyny offensive is being laid bare. It is up to us to build a strong, grassroots intersectional movement that rejects the far right鈥檚 attempts to push misogyny, racism and transphobia to uphold capitalism.

摆闯辞颈苍听聽and the聽Stop Killing Women national day of action on March 15.]

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