How Trump won over Men with UFC, Podcasts, and Anti Trans ads

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Copying from NYT but it's behind a paywall. Not the whole article just a piece that discusses how Trump won over men.


The Gender Gap

The Trump team’s data clearly showed that the highest return on investment would be a group that didn’t often vote: younger men, including Hispanic and Black men who were struggling with inflation, alienated by left-wing ideology and pessimistic about the country.

Mr. Trump had long been nervous about the issue of abortion.

He blamed the fallout from the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade for the G.O.P.’s poor performance in the midterms in 2022. He considered the issue so politically fraught that it had the potential to single-handedly sink his campaign.

And so, on the first Tuesday in April, he settled into his seat on the jet his aides call Trump Force One, a thick stack of papers before him on his desk. On top was a document his senior political advisers had prepared, spelling out a simple and compelling argument against his coming out in favor of a national abortion ban.
The title, in all caps: “How a National Abortion Policy Will Cost Trump the Election.”

A 15- or 16-week ban — which Mr. Trump was seriously contemplating — would be more restrictive than existing law in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, the three “blue wall” states that were crucial to victory in November. The news media, his advisers told him, would relentlessly portray his position as rolling back the rights of women, who were already in revolt against the G.O.P. over abortion.

On the flight to Grand Rapids, Mr. Trump began dictating the script of a video he would release the following week: He would leave the abortion issue to the states and would not say how many weeks he considered appropriate — disappointing some social conservatives but making it harder for Democrats to use the issue against him.

Mr. Trump’s approach to gender could not have been more different from Ms. Harris’s.

His team’s data clearly showed that the highest return on investment would be a group that didn’t often vote: younger men, including Hispanic and Black men who were struggling with inflation, alienated by left-wing ideology and pessimistic about the country.

The Trump campaign committed its limited resources, including the candidate’s time, to communicating with these young men, embracing a hypermasculine image. His first campaign stop after his criminal conviction was an Ultimate Fighting Championship event. He entered the Republican National Convention one night to James Brown’s “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World.” He spent relatively little time doing mainstream media interviews and instead recorded a series of podcast interviews with male comedians and other bro-type personalities who tapped into the kind of audiences Mr. Fabrizio’s data said were most receptive to Mr. Trump’s message.

They included a three-hour podcast with Joe Rogan that racked up more than 45 million views on YouTube, and won Mr. Rogan’s election-eve endorsement. Aides and allies like Mr. Musk made explicit appeals to men to vote for Mr. Trump in the contest’s final hours.

Ms. Harris’s team was trying equally hard to mobilize women in the first national election since the fall of Roe v. Wade, showcasing the stories of women who suffered catastrophic medical emergencies in states where Republicans had enacted strict abortion bans. Michelle Obama made an impassioned case to vote for women’s interests. And there were efforts to encourage wives to ignore their husbands, with sticky notes left in women’s restrooms reminding them that their vote was a secret. The actress Julia Roberts recorded an ad calling the ballot box one of the last places where women still had the freedom to choose.

Mr. Trump was aghast. “Can you imagine a wife not telling a husband who she’s voting for? Did you ever hear anything like that?” he said on Fox News.

But Mr. Trump declined to call upon Nikki Haley, the runner-up in the Republican primaries, as an emissary to female voters. He didn’t think he needed her, and people close to him said he continued to thoroughly dislike her. “You have the issue of abortion,” he said on “Fox and Friends.” “Without abortion, the women love me.”

Trump’s Gamble on Anti-Trans Ads

About a week after the September debate, Mr. Trump started spending heavily on a television ad that hammered Ms. Harris for her position on a seemingly obscure topic: the use of taxpayer funds to fund surgeries for transgender inmates. “Every transgender inmate in the prison system would have access,” Ms. Harris said in a 2019 clip used in the ad.

It was a big bet: Mr. Trump was leading on the two most salient issues in the race — the economy and immigration — yet here he was, intentionally changing the subject.

But the ad, with its vivid tagline — “Kamala is for they/them. President Trump is for you” — broke through in Mr. Trump’s testing to an extent that stunned some of his aides.

So they poured still more money into the ads, running them during football games, which prompted Charlamagne Tha God, the host of the Breakfast Club, a popular show among Black listeners, to express exasperation — and his on-air complaints gave the Trump team fodder for yet another commercial. The Charlamagne ad ranked as one of the Trump team’s most effective 30-second spots, according to an analysis by Future Forward, Ms. Harris’s leading super PAC. It shifted the race 2.7 percentage points in Mr. Trump’s favor after viewers watched it.

The anti-trans ads cut to the core of the Trump argument: that Ms. Harris was “dangerously liberal” — the exact vulnerability her team was most worried about. The ads were effective with Black and Latino men, according to the Trump team, but also with moderate suburban white women who might be concerned about transgender athletes in girls’ sports.


Those were the same suburban women Ms. Harris was trying to mobilize with ads about abortion.

Democrats struggled to respond. At one point, former President Bill Clinton told an associate, “We have to answer it and say we won’t do it.” He even raised the issue in a conversation with the campaign and was told the Trump ads were not necessarily having an impact, according to two people familiar with his conversations. He never broached the topic publicly.

The Harris team debated internally how to respond. Ads the Harris team produced with a direct response to the “they/them” ads wound up faring poorly in internal tests. The ads never ran.

For the Trump team, the transgender attacks — along with other ads showing Ms. Harris laughing or dancing in a colorful blouse and pink pants — fit into a broader Trump goal: to make her look like a lightweight.

Mr. Trump was already running as a felon. In the eyes of his team, the transgender ads made her look unserious, foolish and outside the political mainstream.
 

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Young Men Are Already Souring on Trump​


https://www.thecut.com/author/andrea-gonzalez-ramirez/

By Andrea González-Ramírez, a senior writer for the Cut who covers systems of power.

Updated Apr. 28, 2025



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Photo: Julia Nikhinson/AP

What exactly drove young men’s hard-right shift is one of the most pressing questions that came out of the 2024 election after male voters under 30 proved key in helping deliver Donald Trump’s victory. Since then, there’s been a flurry of media coverage trying to explore the underpinnings of young men’s support for a 78-year-old convicted felon who was found liable for sexual abuse. While many of these stories hand-wring that young men may be forever lost to MAGA-world, less than 100 days into Trump’s second term, it appears some of them are already experiencing buyer’s remorse.

A new national youth poll released on April 23 by the Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School found that 59 percent of men between the ages of 18 and 29 disapprove of Trump. Additionally, 47 percent of them say that he’ll hurt the economy, and 40 percent say they are worse off under the current administration compared to the Biden era. Young men had a different take on the president as recently as January. At the time, 62 percent of men under 30 approved of how Trump handled the economy, according to polling by the youth research firm SocialSphere. But by early March, even before tariff chaos and the economic tailspin that followed, that number had already dropped 14 points, to 48 percent, Puck reported. “If life doesn’t become more affordable as Trump promised, and quickly, even his strongest backers may conclude he can’t deliver,” John Della Volpe, who runs SocialSphere, told the outlet.

This slide is not limited to just young men — several polls show Trump is facing a general downward lurch in his job-approval ratings. A CNN poll released on April 27 found that Trump’s approval rating at the 100-day mark of his administration is the lowest for any newly elected president since Dwight Eisenhower seven decades ago. And a Pew Research Center survey also released on April 23 showed Trump’s net approval dropping from minus 4 percent in late January to minus 19 percent in April.

But the 18-to-29-year-old male voting bloc backed Trump over Vice-President Kamala Harris by a notable 14-point margin in November, following a campaign in which the Trump-Vance ticket heavily centered a retrograde, rightwing vision of masculinity and promised better financial outcomes for men. Trump framed himself as a “protector,” echoing some corners of the manosphere; made several stops across the Joe Rogan/Theo Von/Nelk Boys bro-podcast universe; and tapped directly into some men’s grievances that they’re “not allowed” to be men anymore. Some of these voters bought into the campaign’s gender backlash, as demonstrated by the “Your body, my choice” chant and other violent rhetoric against women spreading like wildfire in the days after the election. But experts say young men’s anti-establishment leanings and their frustrations over their economic prospects following the Covid-19 pandemic also in part fueled Trump’s popularity with them.

That anti-Establishment streak among this group isn’t going anywhere. The latest Harvard poll found that only 17 percent of young men trust Congress all or most of the time. The federal government and the Supreme Court fared slightly better, at 20 and 32 percent, respectively. But just because young men may be souring on Trump now doesn’t mean that they’ll leap into the arms of the Democratic Party. Overall, 71 percent of the men surveyed disapprove of the job congressional Democrats are doing, and 70 percent agree that elected officials in general seem motivated by selfish reasons.

The poll also found that young men’s economic anxieties continue to linger — 37 percent of those surveyed are struggling to get by, and 56 percent of them are fearful of the future. This gives Democrats an opportunity to articulate a path forward that strengthens young men’s financial futures rather than those of the ultrawealthy, as the current administration is doing. Rebuilding trust with these voters won’t be easy, but Democrats will have to if they want to win future elections.

This post has been updated to reflect Trump’s declining overall approval ratings.[/U]
 
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