Unlike Prior Generations, Analysis Shows Millennials Are Not Getting More Conservative As They Age

The Daily Caller

Kate Anderson on December 30, 2022

Millennial voters, both in the United States and in the United Kingdom, do not follow the typical rule that as people age they become more conservative, but rather become more liberal.

According to the Washington Post, millennials are born between 1981 and 1996. According to The Washington Post, they love their pets more than their children and were the last generation to grow up without the internet. Traditionally, voters follow a regular pattern of leaning more liberal until they are 35 and then moving toward more conservative beliefs as they age, but millennials are breaking that pattern, according to an analysis by the Financial Times.


Millennials in the U.S. appeared to be on track to move toward conservatism until about 30 but dropped sharply away from conservatism by the time they were 40, according to the Times. In Britain, millennials never truly moved toward conservatism and have steadily dropped farther away from it as they age.

In the 2022 midterm elections, 63% of younger millennials, 25-29, voted for Democrats in the House of Representatives and in the 2020 election 62% voted for Democrats, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE). CIRCLE also noted that the youth vote was the highest it had been in three decades.

Members of Generation X in both countries also showed an increasingly liberal trajectory until they hit their early 40s, according to the Times. However, in both countries, Gen X rapidly moved towards conservatism like their older counterparts once they reached 45.

The analysis indicated that at 35, millennials were 15 points less conservative than the Boomer and X generations were at the same age, according to the Times. The voting patterns could not pinpoint specific events or causes that pushed millennials toward the significant shift to the left, but one possibility could be connected to growing financial stress.

U.S. data showed that those millennials who were in their late 20s during the financial crisis of 2008 were more likely to favor left-leaning economic policies, according to the Times. The oldest millennials today are 40 and the youngest are 25.

Unlike Prior Generations, Analysis Shows Millennials Are Not Getting More Conservative As They Age

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