Opinion: Harvard Pollster Believes Trump’s Brilliant Campaign Strategy Could Devastate the Left ‘for Years to Come’

An Op-Ed by Nate Cohn in The New York Times noted that in three national polls, Trump leads Comrade Kamala 58 percent to 37 percent among men under 30.

Liberals—to their detriment—have marginalized this particular demographic and it is emerging as a powerful political force in support of President Trump.

This from westernjournal.com.

This change has led John Della Volpe, director of polling at the Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics, to say Trump’s effort to attract young men is impressive.

According to Della Volpe’s Op-Ed for The New York Times:

[Trump] could peel enough away from the Democratic Party to transform the country’s electoral math for years to come.

Although democrats (communists/globalists) have traditionally relied upon young voters, Della Volpe said that since 2020:

[T]he share of young men identifying as registered [d]emocrats has dropped by seven percentage points, while those identifying as Republicans have increased by seven points—a net shift of 14 points in just four years.

Della Volpe said the men with whom Trump connects have a negative outlook on the future and themselves, and he wrote:

[T]hey fear for our country’s future, and nearly half doubt their cohort’s ability to meet our nation’s coming challenges.

He said:

Trump has tapped these anxieties by weaving a hypermasculine message of strength and defiance into his broader narrative that undermines confidence in democratic institutions. And it’s working.

Further:

His playbook? A master class in bro whispering.

Della Volpe wrote that Trump’s tactics include:

[C]hampioning crypto, securing the endorsement of Dave Portnoy—the unapologetically offensive founder of Barstool Sports—and giving the U.F.C. president, Dana White, who embodies the alpha-male archetype that appeals to many young men, a prime spot at the Republican National Convention.

He said:

Over the past four years, young men have shifted significantly in their opinions.

[They] are now less likely to support government-backed climate change solutions (down 15 points, according to our poll) and affirmative action for qualified candidates (down eight points).

Further:

They are more likely to question immigration policy (up 12 points), free trade (up 10 points) and whether government stimulus leads to economic growth (up seven points). They are also more likely to believe that religious values should play a more important role in government (up six points).

According to The New York Times, Daniel A. Cox, director of the Survey Center on American Life at the American Enterprise Institute, said:

[T]hose changes come from being a neglected part of American society.

Further:

Economically they’re getting shafted, politically they’re getting shafted, culturally no one’s looking out for them.

They’re drawn to his message, his persona, the unapologetic machismo he tries to exude.

One feminist said:

[M]en have been shunted aside by liberals.

Niobe Way, a professor of developmental psychology at NYU said:

I’m going to talk as a feminist: We do it, when we try to suggest women are brilliant and men are the problem.

Further:

Trump is definitely saying, ‘I see you, I value you, I see your masculinity.’

Ranger Irwin, 20, of Nevada told the Times that America no longer “lets boys be boys.”

He explained:

Men my age, from a very young age we were told, ‘You’re not supposed to do this, you’re not supposed to do that, you’re just supposed to sit here and be quiet.’

[Which makes being a man] a little bit harder than it used to be.

God speed to President Trump and to the Take Back of our Constitutional Republic.