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Telia on scored.co
9 months ago10 points(+0/-0/+10Score on mirror)1 child
Sanseito is the current "far right" party that's currently rising in Japan.
>Broken down by gender, male respondents were more supportive of Sanseito's "Japanese first" policies. . 55% of men said they value it, with only 38% opposed. Women were almost evenly split: 42% favored the policy, with 43% against it.
>71%of respondents between the ages 18 and 29 said they appreciate the policy, versus 27% who said they do not.
>But only 29% of those 70 or older said the policy works for them, while 53% said it does not sit well with them.
Similar patterns are found regarding the question about Sanseito substantially increasing the number of Upper House seats.
>59% of men said it is a good move, nearly double the 30% who disagreed with this. Of women, 46% agreed, a little more than the 38% who did not.
>And the generational divide remained. About 60% of respondents in their 50s and in lower age brackets said the gains were good, but only about 40% of those 70 or older said they agreed. A similar ratio was seen in those who expressed unease with Sanseito’s rise
The age divide is worse than the gender divide. The boomer generation are leftists and the younger generation are right wingers
But of course (naturally) they are again the bigger libtards. Just shows again that women are retarded when it comes to social issues. Though to be fair, at least they only have a small gap, instead of the society shattering absolute majority of libtard voting women we have.
>Broken down by gender, male respondents were more supportive of Sanseito's "Japanese first" policies. . 55% of men said they value it, with only 38% opposed. Women were almost evenly split: 42% favored the policy, with 43% against it.
>71%of respondents between the ages 18 and 29 said they appreciate the policy, versus 27% who said they do not.
>But only 29% of those 70 or older said the policy works for them, while 53% said it does not sit well with them.
Similar patterns are found regarding the question about Sanseito substantially increasing the number of Upper House seats.
>59% of men said it is a good move, nearly double the 30% who disagreed with this. Of women, 46% agreed, a little more than the 38% who did not.
>And the generational divide remained. About 60% of respondents in their 50s and in lower age brackets said the gains were good, but only about 40% of those 70 or older said they agreed. A similar ratio was seen in those who expressed unease with Sanseito’s rise
The age divide is worse than the gender divide. The boomer generation are leftists and the younger generation are right wingers
Also pleasantly surprised with the female opinion here, especially in the second polling