Manospheres of Influence

trump supporters gen z young men voters
In many ways, the drift of young men away from Trump this year tells the story of why his presidency has hit the skids. Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images
Peter Hamby
January 6, 2026

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After the Trump administration stormed into Venezuela to arrest Nicolás Maduro, I waited eagerly for my colleague Julia Ioffe to weigh in with her typically insightful (and wry) analysis of foreign policy in the MAGA era. She delivered, outlining the myriad ways in which Trump has dialed back his supposedly isolationist views in favor of a “newfound zest for foreign intervention.” The catalogue, so far this term: a strike against Iran’s nuclear sites; strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen and Islamic State positions in Syria and Nigeria; and saber-rattling against Colombia, Mexico, and Denmark. Last year, Trump launched more missile strikes (626) than Joe Biden did in his entire first term (555). The administration made its pivot abundantly clear on X this week, with the State Department posting an aggro image of Trump, declaring, “THIS IS OUR HEMISPHERE.”