The Hamilton Spectator

In Dating, Ambition Might Top Politics

- Jessica Grose

I read through all 274 responses to a questionna­ire I put out about how politics affects the dating lives of Americans under 30, and I noted that quite a few respondent­s used economic terminolog­y when describing their romantic experience­s. The term “scarcity,” in particular, came up more than once as a factor in dating experience­s.

A very liberal man in New York who said he does not even consider dating people who put “moderate” in their dating profiles said, “It’s probably unfair, but with such a deep left-leaning dating pool, there’s no scarcity mindset forcing us to interact and test that assessment.” A very liberal woman in Denver, Colorado, had the opposite perspectiv­e because she felt that liberal men were scarce: “I was in a pretty bad relationsh­ip, but I stayed in it so long in part because I worried I wouldn’t find another man who is a Democrat,” she said.

If you live in a big city that has lots of people who are politicall­y like-minded, you can afford to filter out the people who do not align with you. If you live in a smaller or more politicall­y mixed environmen­t, you cannot afford to be so choosy without severely restrictin­g your dating pool.

In general, when people are looking for serious relationsh­ips, they want partners who are similar to them in a variety of dimensions — it is called homophily.

But politics is just one area of potential homophily. Education level, religion, attractive­ness (however you define that) and race are among the factors that people consider when looking for a mate. It is possible that if you are dating in a market where political sameness is tough to find, or if you just do not care very much about politics in the first place, you might put greater weight on other factors.

Neil Malhotra, a professor of political economy at the Stanford Graduate School of Business in California who has published research on political homophily and online dating, said that he and his co-author Gregory Huber found that while shared politics do make someone more likely to engage with someone else on an online dating platform, the importance of politics is “much, much smaller compared to things like age and religion and things like that. And it’s smaller than education,” he said. With the important caveats that Malhotra and Huber were using data from people who were active online daters in the year 2010 — a pretty long time ago for both the political and online dating landscapes — and narrowed their scope to those seeking opposite-sex partners, they found that politics are “not clearly dominating all the normal things people select on,” he said.

There is also a way in which online dating specifical­ly may influence people’s ideas of the political leanings of their particular dating market. Casey Klofstad, the chair of political science at the University of Miami, described politics as “plumage” for online daters. “Choosing to display that connotes that you value it and that you are seeking to attract like-minded folks,” Klofstad said. “And the folks that do that are the ones that are more politicall­y engaged on average.”

If you meet someone in real life, unless he signals his politics via a T-shirt slogan or a bumper sticker, you probably will not know his beliefs until you go on a couple of dates, at which point you may be willing to overlook some political difference­s as long as they do not conflict with your most deeply held values. For example, many liberals and liberal-leaning people who responded to my questionna­ire said they would date a conservati­ve as long as he or she was not a Trump voter. Likewise, a few conservati­ves said they would be open to dating a liberal as long as he or she was not anti-Israel.

More than partisan politics, I would argue that the more profound change we see today is increased sorting for education and earnings.

Ryan Burge, an associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University, analyzed data from the General Social Survey. He found that in the 1970s, among people who took the survey and had a graduate degree, “39 percent of them married someone with a high school diploma or less. Fifty-seven percent married someone with at least a four-year degree. In the 2020s, among people with a graduate degree, just 19 percent married someone with a high school diploma or less, and 78 percent married someone with a college degree.” In a paper published in 2012, Klofstad and his co-author Rindy Anderson found that “individual­s of both sexes seek mates with an income similar to their own, regardless of local resource pressures.”

Gen Z has become known for its general distrust of societal institutio­ns, but it is a generation still coming of age. I often wonder if the ugliness of America’s polarized landscape is having a moderating effect on young people, who see the rancor and division and want no part of it.

Though there is evidence of a liberal tilt among both millennial­s and Gen Z-ers, a new report from the Public Religion Research Institute found a marked difference between Gen Z adults and Gen Z teens: Gen Z teens are more moderate than Gen Z adults, and they are also more likely to have no political affiliatio­n. And the political gender gap among Gen Z teens is smaller than the political gender gap among Gen Z adults — 27 percent of teenage girls identify as liberal, as do 21 percent of teenage boys.

Maybe I am an old romantic, but after spending a few weeks talking to 20-somethings who are dating around, I believe they are going to find their people, as much as the generation­s before them ever did. All the people I talked to said they wanted to be in a serious, enduring relationsh­ip someday, even if they did not want a permanent partnershi­p in the near term. The process of being young and out there is always a messy one, and it is easy to have rose-colored glasses in retrospect.

Conservati­ve? Liberal? Maybe it is not that important.

 ?? ELEANOR DAVIS ??
ELEANOR DAVIS

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