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Tuesday, August 19, 2025

The Trump-Era Gender Wars, Brought to You By Neoliberalism

Monday 18 August 2025,
 by Meagan Day, Stephanie Coonz





We’re seeing an alarming revival of archaic gender role ideas, from the manosphere’s remasculinization crusade to trad wives’ rejection of public life. Veteran historian of gender roles Stephanie Coontz explains the moment’s deep economic undercurrents.


In Dallas, Texas, a wellness influencer urges the crowd at a conservative women’s conference to turn away from work and toward the family. “Less burnout, more babies!” podcaster Alex Clark says to raucous applause. “Less feminism, more femininity!”

Outside of Cincinnati, Ohio, suburban families are building a commune suffused with the ethos of Make America Healthy Again, emphasizing natural living and traditional gender roles. “Whatever this feminist BS is — chase a career, leave your family — it’s not working,” says one community member, a former small business owner who’s now a stay-at-home mother and vaccine skeptic.

From Washington, DC, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth boosts an interview CNN conducted with his church’s pastor, Doug Wilson. “Women are the kind of people that people come out of,” Wilson says, not the kind of people who should be allowed to vote. “The wife and mother, who is the chief executive of the home, is entrusted with three or four or five eternal souls.” She’s got enough on her plate already.

As for men, Hegseth sharply distinguishes between two variants. On the one hand, in his own words, there are


“red-blooded American men,” “strong men,” “fighting men,” “courageous men,” “rock-ribbed men,” “masculine men,” “tough” men, “normal dudes,” “cowboys,” and “alpha males.”

And on the other,


“candy-asses,” “pussies,” “whores to wokesters,” “effeminate,” those who “suppress natural masculine instincts for honor,” “beta-male[s],” and “so-called men.”

Since the 2024 election, the gender role noise seems to only be growing louder. Nearly everyone agrees that society has gone off the rails, that something valuable has been misplaced — and a growing portion ardently believes that the path to restoration runs through men’s and women’s re-embrace of our innate sex-determined purpose. Project 2025 frames this imperative in high-stakes civilizational terms, warning that “the very moral foundations of our society are in peril.”

For those of us who came of age in the 1990s or later, ideas about sanctioned male and female social roles are not foreign. But they’ve primarily operated as a series of tacit assumptions and silent expectations, with bolder articulations confined to the religious right. Now, they’re morphing into a quasi-secular gospel preached in fiery defiance of the modern establishment.

In this interview, veteran activist and historian Stephanie Coontz sheds light on the contemporary resurgence of gender role orthodoxy. Coontz has authored seven books on marriage and family life, including A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Women at the Dawn of the 1960s; The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap; and Marriage, A History: How Love Conquered Marriage, which was cited in the US Supreme Court decision on marriage equality. After decades of researching the dynamics of gender-based social expectations, Stephanie Coontz brings a unique perspective to the reactionary ideas currently swirling in the mainstream discourse.

Coontz has spent many decades steeped in political struggle. She was arrested during Berkeley’s Free Speech Movement in 1964, was a high-profile spokesperson and national organizer for the anti–Vietnam War movement, and was active in the early women’s movement. She is director of research and public education at the Council on Contemporary Families and a professor emerita at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. Her forthcoming book, For Better and Worse: The Problematic Past and Challenging Future of Marriage, is due out from Viking Press in early 2026.

Her academic work emerged from a desire to move beyond simplistic narratives about women’s oppression or triumph, seeking instead to understand men’s and women’s complex interactions with each other in relation to the broader political-economic context — a line of inquiry that led to her first book, The Social Origins of Private Life: A History of American Families, 1600–1900. Coontz approaches her historical work with a universalist sensibility, attuned to the pressures that bear down on men and women alike.

Coontz spoke to Jacobin about the enduring political salience of gender, where “traditional” men’s and women’s roles come from, how capitalism shaped contemporary sex expectations, and how neoliberal economic devastation has resulted in an existential impasse, fueling an alarming revival of reactionary gender ideas half a century after the feminist Second Wave.

Meagan Day - I want to start with some polling data that I think is quite striking. The share of Republican men who agree that women should return to their traditional roles in society increased from 28 percent in May 2022 to 48 percent in November 2024, and Republican women’s agreement also jumped considerably during that period. Another survey found that the share of Republicans who agree that society is too accepting of men who take on roles typically associated with women increased from 18 percent in 2017 to 28 percent in 2024.

These aren’t majorities, but they’re notable trends. How should we think about this phenomenon?

Stephanie Coontz - Yes, also the partisan divide on same-sex marriage has hit its largest gap in almost thirty years. The “manosphere” is getting a lot of attention, and so is the “trad wife” thing. Overall, there’s been an increase in the number of people, especially people who identify as Republican or conservative, expressing nostalgia for “traditional” gender roles and ideals. Much of that is polarization, with Republicans getting more conservative as Democrats get more liberal on several issues. But in 2024, there was a dramatic conservative swing in the political self-identification of youth. In 2020, 55 percent of eighteen- to twenty-nine-year-olds said they identified as Democrat or leaned that way versus only 37 percent Republican. But in 2024, Republicans gained the advantage: 47 versus 46 percent.

I think these changes tell us that people’s anxieties about recent social trends have been exacerbated in recent years, especially in the period leading up to the 2024 election. But they certainly don’t paint a return to tradition across the board. For one thing, just one year later, the same youth poll in 2025 has eighteen- to twenty-nine-year-olds reporting 49 percent Democrat to 42 percent Republican. That makes me wonder if the 2024 swing wasn’t a reaction to the Democrats’ blindness about the economic pressures people were feeling and their misguided insistence on how well the “Biden economy” was doing.

For another, to get back to gender and sexuality, in 2025, 68 percent of Americans still say they support same-sex marriage. That’s down from 71 percent in 2022 and 2023, but it’s higher than at any time between 1996 and 2019. And not only do polls consistently show high support for men and women sharing housework and childcare, but researchers have also documented a substantial increase in men’s actual share of what we used to call “women’s work” over the last two decades.If you drill down, it’s more about the sense that life was easier when men could earn enough to support a family and people had more family time.

I’m not saying we shouldn’t take the nostalgia for “traditional” gender roles seriously. And I think the new, or at least newly visible, viciousness in the “manosphere” is very concerning. But I also think we have to be more sensitive to the pressures and dilemmas that make people susceptible to these messages. Yes, many people do cling to a real belief in male superiority, and it’s quite common for people who start as benevolent sexists to turn into hostile sexists when women reject patronization, as women have been rather militantly doing recently. But in other cases, if you drill down, it’s more about the sense that life was easier when men could earn enough to support a family and people had more family time. When you combine that with the very real losses in economic options, security, and respect that working-class and even many middle-class young men have experienced, and the disrespect that many privileged men and women show for older kinds of masculinity, then I think some of this is understandable. Not just among men but women too, because a lot of their “careers” have turned out to be far less “fulfilling” than promised.

Working-class men and rural communities have experienced an ongoing, slow-motion crisis since the 1970s. In my new book, I argue that the crisis originates in a systematic campaign to overturn the New Deal’s restrictions on the prerogatives of banks, corporations, and inherited wealth and to blame the resultant losses for white working-class men on the Great Society reforms that tried to extend those New Deal protections to women, black people, and other minorities. But to the extent that many liberals have been touting their (mostly sound-bite) support for the liberal social agenda without attaching that to vigorous opposition to the corporate economic agenda, they’ve made it easier for the right-wing to push the idea that it’s the gains for women and minorities rather than the gains for Wall Street that have hurt workers.

When Hillary Clinton ran for president, I would watch her debates, and she would give these long lists of how we need to support the rights of women and gays and lesbians and transgender people, all of which I’m in favor of. Still, I would scream at the television, “Would you add a farmer? Would you add a machinist?” That neglect of class issues makes it much easier for the Right to pretend that it’s not economic inequality but rather cultural diversity that has led to the disrespect and loss of security for white working-class men.



Meagan Day - What are the real causes of the profound sense of disrespect and humiliation among the working class, and particularly working-class men?

Stephanie Coontz - The most fundamental cause is the reversal of the growth of real wages and economic security that marked working-class family life in the postwar period up to the early 1970s, and the resultant surge in inequality that encouraged the so-called “winners” in society to cultivate social tastes and surround themselves with luxuries that an older generation of capitalists generally kept discretely out of sight. And this has devalued an older masculine work ethic that emphasized doing work that was hard and often unpleasant but allowed you to support and protect your wife and kids who in turn gave you gratitude and respect for your sacrifices.

That masculine work bargain — making physical and mental sacrifices to support and defend your womenfolk, and getting their gratitude, admiration, and services in return — has not paid off for the past half century. We all know about the losses in terms of economic progress, the pride in knowing that you are going to do better than your father and your grandfather. But men also feel that they aren’t respected for difficult blue-collar jobs, for mechanical skills, for being able to do hard work.

That masculine work bargain — making physical and mental sacrifices to support and defend your womenfolk, and getting their gratitude, admiration, and services in return — has not paid off for the past half century.

To top it off, other experiences of disrespect have multiplied over the past forty years. It used to be that everybody had to wait on the phone a similar amount of time to get help or had to wait in lines a similar amount. Now we’re seeing the “premiumization” of everything, with people of means being able to pay to jump every line and get all sorts of extra attention. Some studies show that when people have to board a plane through the first-class cabin, it leads to increases in air rage incidents.

I think this kind of inequality is especially hard for men to cope with, because one of the key elements of masculinity ever since the rise of democratic ideology has been the promise that unlike in aristocratic society, you don’t need to kowtow to people with more wealth than you; they can’t insist on the rituals of submission that lower-class men used to have to make to high-status men. You’re a man; that in and of itself entitles you to respect. One old logger I interviewed one time told me that it was one thing to take orders from the foreman or the boss, but when you were off duty, you didn’t have to step aside for anyone. Now you not only have to stand aside to let rich people go first — you hear them making fun of you because you order your steak well-done and don’t know what arugula is.

Meagan Day - We’re talking about a specific version of masculinity characterized by hard-edged, independent, competitive, unemotional performance in the public sphere, which is supposed to be exchanged for rewards of love and gratitude in the private sphere. But it’s really important not to naturalize this ideal. This is something that emerges only after industrial capitalism flourishes in the nineteenth century. What were gender roles like before?

Stephanie Coontz - Male dominance is not universal, but it became very widespread across the world for historical reasons I’ve explored in various books. But what gives me hope that we can change that is that, despite its prevalence, there are huge differences in what traits are thought to be associated with masculinity.

For example, in hunting-and-gathering societies, a man who is a braggart or a bully is not admired but ostracized. The hunter whose arrow downed the animal doesn’t get a bigger share of the meat, and he never brags about his kill. When I first read about hunting-and-gathering societies, I thought that they were just intrinsically better people than we are. What I’ve gleaned instead is that they could see and penalize bad behaviors more easily than we do, and they had fewer sophisticated and complex ways for people to monopolize resources and manipulate and deceive.

In aristocratic patriarchal societies, men, not women, were seen as the altruistic, self-sacrificing sex. Women were thought to be more selfish, more ambitious for their personal families, more prone to sexual excess, and more manipulative. Men were supposed to be brave and decisive, but they, or at least upper- and middle-class men, were also credited with tremendous emotional sensitivity. Right up until the nineteenth century, it was not the least bit unmanly to cry. In the twelfth-century “Song of Roland,” when Roland dies, twenty thousand men weep, faint, and fall off their horses in their grief. There’s an old medieval poem called “The Wanderer,” in which one of the things the guy who’s been sent into exile talks about is how he misses sitting at the knee of his lord and laying his head there in gratitude for the lord’s generosity and love.In aristocratic patriarchal societies, men, not women, were seen as the altruistic, self-sacrificing sex.

Even in the early modern era, even as men began to be seen as “breadwinners,” a word that didn’t come into use until the 1820s, men were not immediately seen as people who had to be emotionally self-contained and taciturn. Historians such as Richard Godbeer and E. Anthony Rotundo have discovered wonderful letters and diaries of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century men talking about how much they love their male friends or complaining about how lonely they feel when the other guy doesn’t write to them. Men often shared the same bed or walked arm in arm. They frequently talked in hugely emotional terms that we would now associate with women. I once did an experiment in my class where I crossed out the names of who wrote these letters and asked students who wrote them. They all thought teenage girls wrote them.

It was really only in the latter part of the nineteenth century that these emotional expectations changed. Until then, little boys were often dressed like girls, and “big boys” were allowed to be affectionate with each other. But in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, “sissy,” which used to be an affectionate word for little sister, suddenly became a disparaging word for men who were gentle. Women were told to stop being so affectionate with their sons. Boys were shamed for being affectionate with each other. We talk about the hate and the misogyny embedded in insults for women, but this was the period in which they invented more horrible terms for men who don’t live up to this ideal of masculinity than there are for women who don’t live up to the feminine ideals. Girls are allowed to be tomboys until they’re twelve or thirteen, and even older nowadays. Boys get hit with expectations to suck it up, don’t cry, don’t be a sissy as toddlers, before they have the reasoning skills to resent them.

Meagan Day - How were households set up before the “male breadwinner” model?

Stephanie Coontz - At all levels of society, even in the upper classes, economic subsistence depended on household production and personal and family connections. Women in the lower classes drove cows to market and were dairy makers and brewers of beer. They were active members of the economy. Upper-class women were expected to have a good head for business and to help the family cultivate valuable alliances. Neighbors traded favors and food.

But as wage labor developed, both in the upper and lower classes, work that was paid for in cash became more important than the trade and barter of goods produced at home. Men would go out to work, and so would kids of both sexes, earning cash to purchase commodities. The reason women didn’t leave the home to work is that somebody had to stay home to continue the absolutely essential labor of processing those commodities. It was not because the woman was supposed to be closeted in the home, as her natural place or role, but because flour had to be sifted by hand, fires needed tended, water had to be drawn from the well, bacon had to be cured, milk turned into cheese. And although women had to be around to nurse babies, mothering was not romanticized. Childcare was done by older kids or by neighbor girls trying to earn some money for a dowry that would help them and a future husband set up a farm or shop of their own. Only later, as the market economy got advanced enough so that women’s household labor was less essential, and many women started agitating for the same economic and political rights that men were winning, did people start justifying women’s exclusion from jobs on grounds that they were too delicate and sensitive to work outside the home, or too devoted to childcare.There was nothing delicate about women’s traditional work in the family economy. Their kitchens were covered with bloody haunches that they were cutting up and beer they were brewing.

There was nothing delicate about women’s traditional work in the family economy. Their kitchens were covered with bloody haunches that they were cutting up and beer they were brewing. Their hands were rough from chopping wood and tending the fire. But gradually, as you got the development of an increasingly commodified economy where more and more things could and needed to be bought — things you couldn’t barter for — and as men began to work for wages for particular hours which could not be combined with work at home, women’s work inside the home began to be seen as secondary. So you got a sense that men’s work was what really kept the family going.

In the early days of wage labor, women tended to work outside the home when their kids were young and then withdraw from that when their kids were old enough to join the labor force — which could be as early as eight, nine, or ten — because somebody needed to be home to transform products into things the family could use. It was tremendously hard work, housework, but it made the family’s living standard better to have someone at home who could wash the clothes and prepare the food.

Meagan Day - So instead of the household functioning as a single symbiotic unit in an economy of trade and barter, making most things from whole cloth, you now have men exiting the house to work for a wage, and then the household using the cash to buy partially processed commodities for women to then further process in the home.

This is a completely different way of running a household, and the new gendered division of labor then generates new ideas about what a man and a woman are. What new gender expectations and fantasies emerged as a consequence?

Stephanie Coontz - Money becomes very important, and money is associated with men. It becomes a matter of male pride, of class achievement for a man to be able to support a wife and for a wife to be able to organize the home in ways that made it a place for rest, not work — though of course this idea only multiplied the unpaid work of women in making the home appear restful to those who came home to it.

If the husband earned enough to afford it, or the husband and children together earned enough, then having the woman stay home to process allowed for an increase in the quality of life that seemed quite amazing. She could make the home more welcoming, put together more comfortable beds, furnish tables where you could sit and drink out of glasses instead of passing a flagon around. The whole family did better by it. So even though not everyone was able to achieve this ideal, and many women did have to work outside the home, the male breadwinner–female housewife model became the ideal among the working class.

At the same time, ironically, middle-class women who had attained this ideal and could increasingly buy finished commodities, requiring less labor to process . . . these women found themselves growing restless. They started thinking that maybe they should be allowed to pursue jobs outside the home — not working as servants in other people’s homes, but getting the kinds of education that men of their class were afforded, along with opportunities to participate in society and be regarded for their individual talents.

Meagan Day - So early on in the history of industrial capitalism, we’re getting a glimpse of the wife/worker paradox: if you’re forced to do wage labor under unpleasant conditions, then the idea of being a housewife and having a man provide for you and want to protect you can be very alluring. But if you are living that life, and technological advancement means the production of increasingly finished commodities requiring very little at-home processing, then you start to dream of something that involves more self-actualization.

Stephanie Coontz - Yes, and this is an enduring dynamic. The trad-wife influencers today are basically peddling the same fantasy that appealed to working women in the mid-nineteenth century — the fantasy of having a man work outside the home and support you so that you can stay home and do light production work, cooking and crocheting and keeping your husband and children amused, and maybe sneaking in a little reading or other leisure activities.

Meagan Day - What’s wrong with it? Why is it not something worth longing for? It sounds like it was a step up for many women.

Stephanie Coontz - Well, if you were a woman who didn’t have aspirations for a career, could keep yourself amused by housework and cooking and television, and you had a father and then a husband who really appreciated what you did at home and was never abusive and never expected that you would obey him just because he was supporting you — that did seem like a step up, I suppose. But in reality, women have often found it stultifying, and many women who enjoyed it for a while came to dislike it, which is why so many middle-class women who had been homemakers decided at a certain point they couldn’t bear it any longer.Money becomes very important, and money is associated with men. It becomes a matter of male pride, of class achievement for a man to be able to support a wife.

Meanwhile, if you were a woman whose husband was unfaithful, or who hit you, or who expected constant service and bossed you around, you had no legal or social recourse. The ideology and the structure were based on an assumption that you were being protected in the home, so you had no sources of protection anywhere else. You were trapped.

Meagan Day - How did this male breadwinner–female housewife ideal ascend to its apex in the 1950s in the United States?

Stephanie Coontz - It was still aspirational for most of the nineteenth century, but many women had other aspirations as well. From the second half of the nineteenth century onward, middle-class women increasingly wanted to get jobs or an education. Meanwhile, there were still working-class women who needed jobs outside the home for survival, and they increasingly demanded better wages and working conditions. As we moved into the early twentieth century, we saw the emergence of a big feminist movement. There was also a revolution in gender and sexual mores that was every bit as challenging to many contemporaries as that of the early twenty-first century, and it spurred the emergence of a culture war that has striking parallels with the one we have been experiencing over the last couple of decades.

Then the Depression hit. For many women, that meant they weren’t allowed to work, the rationale being that jobs needed to be reserved for men. When they could work, it was in very difficult circumstances. When World War II happened, however, women were called into the workforce and allowed to do jobs and learn skills they’d never had access to before. The conditions were better, the pay was better, and many women enjoyed it. Polls at the end of the war found that most of them didn’t want to quit their jobs. On the other hand, many wanted to have kids, so it was easier to push them out of the labor force to make way for men returning from the war.

Meagan Day - It was easier because the ideal of the male breadwinner–female housewife family was still alive and well, ready to be activated?

Stephanie Coontz - Yes, and many decided to try it because the economic conditions were so conducive to doing it. My mother was a good example. She had worked as a shipfitter during World War II and really loved it. But when the men came home, she was fired. She resented that, but my dad was able to go to college on the GI Bill and got enough of an allowance that she had a chance to have me and stay at home to raise me. That was OK for several years, and then it started not being OK anymore. That’s what happened to many, many women.

Meagan Day - Basically, economic conditions aligned to make it possible for a large group of women to give this fantasy that had been percolating since the mid-nineteenth century a go in unison. And they spent a decade or two experimenting with it before realizing it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. Right?

Stephanie Coontz - Right. To be sure, I have oral histories of many women who thoroughly enjoyed the homemaker life and never regretted it. But many other women, they wanted something different for themselves — or, especially, for their daughters. Over and over again, when I interviewed women for my book A Strange Stirring on the impact of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique, women would tell me how desperate they had felt to break free. Or their daughters would tell me that their moms had told them, “I don’t want you to be a housewife just like me.”

Some were desperately unhappy. I interviewed Constance Ahrons, who eventually got divorced, went back to school, and became a prominent sociologist. She described how, before that, she would stand in the kitchen washing dishes with tears running down her cheeks. She would think, “What’s wrong with me? I’m so ungrateful. I have a better life than my mother had.” But it felt terrible to live in an economy and culture in which there were all these new things to do and think about and not have access to them. To be completely boxed out of public life. She went to a therapist, who prescribed tranquilizers. But when she finally read The Feminine Mystique she said she finally realized, “The problem is in my situation, not in me.” So she threw her tranquilizers down the toilet and eventually divorced her unsupportive husband.

When I interviewed women who had read The Feminine Mystique, they told me the same stories over and over, of saying, “What’s wrong with me? Why aren’t I grateful? My mother would’ve killed for a life like this.” Not all women could be homemakers, of course, but more of them could than ever before. And many of them found it intolerable for various reasons, which led to the next big wave of feminism.

Meagan Day - What about men? They were living the dream in the 1950s too. Were they enjoying it?

Stephanie Coontz - It was not a golden era. There was still plenty of racial and religious prejudice; workers were still exploited and mistreated and overworked. But the difference is the sense of progress then versus the sense of falling backward in more recent decades.

In the 1950s, people who had lived through the Depression and who had fought in World War II came out feeling really proud of their country. They had fought fascism and won, and this was a draftee army, so there was a sense of everyone making similar sacrifices. And meanwhile, the improvements to society wrought by the New Deal and the expansion of government funding, even under Republican presidents like Dwight D. Eisenhower, created new jobs, the highway program, investment in education, veterans’ benefits to send you back to school. It was an era where you could put up with discomforts because they were so much less than you and your parents previously had had to put up with. It was an upward trajectory. In that era, every generation of young men entering the labor market was making three times as much in constant dollars as his dad had at the same age. In 1960, the median price of a house in America was only a bit more than twice as much as the annual median income, compared to almost six times as much today.

So although men were working very hard in the ’50s, they felt they were being rewarded for it. If you were a male worker, your wages were rising, your purchasing power was rising, you were beginning to get pensions. You were doing it at quite a physical sacrifice. But what you told yourself is, “This is what a man does.”Not all women could be homemakers, of course, but more of them could than ever before. And many of them found it intolerable for various reasons, which led to the next big wave of feminism.

I’ve interviewed many working-class men who, if I saw them interacting at home with their daughters and wives, I might be irritated by because of the extent to which they thought of themselves as entitled because of the work they’d put in. But when I listened to them describe how proud they were of what they were able to do and how hard it was — and they couldn’t tell you how hard it was emotionally, because that’s not part of what it was to be a man anymore by that time, so they emphasized the physical — I could tell that there was something deeper at play. A sense of optimism, dignity, and just reward.

Since the mid- to late ’70s, with only a few short exceptions, there’s been a sense among many people that they’re not doing as well as the previous generation and they don’t feel secure or optimistic about the future. The rewards are not forthcoming. This is especially salient for men, for whom the ability to make money and provide for a family, and to do it better than your father before you, and to achieve this through strenuous hard work, is the masculine ideal and the path to self-respect. (And also the way to gain the respect of many women: While it may not be literally true, the incels are acknowledging a real dynamic when they say that 80 percent of the women are looking for 20 percent of the men.) And if that kind of self-respect, and respect from others, is unachievable, you either blame yourself or you blame someone else or you look for alternative ways to feel “manly,” some of which can be very antisocial.

Meagan Day - How should we relate to this battered masculine ideal? How much deference do we need to give it if we understand that it’s not natural and comes with all sorts of problems, but we also understand that men have genuinely been robbed of something valuable?

Stephanie Coontz - That’s a really tough question. But as women and as people who are critics of hierarchical gender and class arrangements, we have to find ways to acknowledge the messages men have received about how to be men and the self-sacrificing or just plain helpful things they often do trying to live up to those messages, and at the same time explain that they don’t have to do all the painful stuff to themselves or to others that they’ve been told is part of masculinity.

Going back to the polls on gender you cited, we have to be more conscious of the fact that in most societies, gender has traditionally been the first thing people see about any individual in any setting. Almost all of us are flooded from birth with expectations about how we should behave toward others and how they will behave toward us based on the gender we most closely resemble. In experiments, when people are shown a video of a baby and asked to describe its behavior, they often can’t or won’t describe it unless told the sex. Told it’s a boy, they describe tears as anger; told it’s a girl, they describe the same crying baby as scared.

By ten months old, infants associate stereotypically female faces with gender-typed objects. Seventy percent of toddlers are employing gender labels before they’re two years old. One of the first things toddlers learn is how you tell a woman from a man, which one they’re going to be, and what tools and clothes their sex is supposed to use. Parenting hardly matters here: My son, who has a feminist for a mom and who had a female doctor, once insisted to me that women couldn’t be doctors. It’s so powerful. The more they learn about what their gender is supposedly good at or bad at or likes or dislikes, the more they tend to adjust their behavior to accord with it — or in other cases, to defy or reject it because they can’t or won’t follow those gender instructions.If that kind of self-respect, and respect from others, is unachievable, you either blame yourself or you blame someone else or you look for alternative ways to feel ‘manly,’ some of which can be very antisocial.

The primacy of gender in identifying a person exists across cultures, with only minor exceptions: The Yoruba in West Africa, for example, prioritize age over gender to the extent that they will often say “I took my eldest to the store” instead of “my son” or “my daughter.” But in most societies we know of, gender has been the easiest, earliest, and most universal way to classify people.

All of which is to say that we’re approaching it wrongly if we don’t start from understanding how salient gender is and how threatening it is to feel unable to fulfill expectations you’ve had of yourself and others since you were eight or nine months old. We’ve got to start by understanding the fear and the disorientation people feel.

On these and many other issues, the right wing understands far better than most liberals and left-wingers that there’s always a good section of the population that is up for grabs, so to speak. There’s a substantial middle group between the minority of Americans who support equal rights for all people and the minority who unequivocally oppose them. Challenges and worries in people’s work and family lives or communities can create ambivalence or fear, insecurities that can be triggered and politically captured. We have to provide experiences and arguments that help people work through their ambivalence and not prematurely accuse them of being racist or sexist or fascist, which only makes them more likely to become that. As Loretta Ross, the former head of the National Anti-Violence Network, put it, “We’ve got three different kinds of allies: potential, problematic, and proven. We need to unite all of them. We’ve got different strategies for potential ones, problematic ones, and proven ones, but if we dismiss people because they’re problematic or unproven, then we weaken our ability to make change.”

The stereotypical gender roles of the modern period, which reached their height in the 1950s, continue to have a profound pull. There are reasons for that. Rather than condemn people’s nostalgia, it’s our job to explain that it reflects a legitimate, reality-based sense of loss, but it’s based upon a misunderstanding of what caused the stability of 1950s families: first, men’s legal authority over women and women’s inability to make other choices, which most people no longer agree with, and second, an economy in which one person could support a family on one wage, which is long gone.Rather than condemn people’s nostalgia, it’s our job to explain that it reflects a legitimate, reality-based sense of loss, but it’s based upon a misunderstanding of what caused the stability of 1950s families.

A lot has changed since then, and we have not always explained those changes and the solutions we want in ways that are the wisest or the most sensitive to people’s doubts. This leaves an opening for the Right, and it is taking full advantage. It has constructed a conscious, very cynical alliance between the free-market proponents who want to remove all the postwar restrictions on Wall Street and the rich, and the social conservatives who want to reimpose all the postwar restrictions on gender and sexuality.

Still, while I don’t want to minimize the real dangers in the resurgence of older gender prejudices and privileges, it’s important to recognize that public opinion hasn’t been dragged back to what it was in the 1990s, much less the 1950s. There is an alarming shift, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s mostly occurring among people who were already conservative, accelerated by the radicalization of conservatism in general. There’s probably a fairly steady base of about 20 percent of people who are opposed to racial, gender, and sexual equality, 20 percent of people who are absolutely for equality in all its forms, and a huge group that toggles in between. The first group is hardening its attitudes and becoming more militant. We have to redouble our effort to reach out to the in-between group on the issues where we agree and patiently explain the issues we don’t agree on but should keep discussing.

Meagan Day - Are you a gender optimist?

Stephanie Coontz - I’m certainly not a pessimist. It’s worth remembering that despite the insecurity and setbacks we discussed and the failure of liberal elites to address them, although support for gender equality is lower on some measures than it was five or ten years ago, it’s still higher than at any time in the 250 years before that. Same with same-sex marriage. Support was “only” 68 percent in 2025, with 29 percent opposed. But in the 1990s, opposition to same-sex marriage never fell below 62 percent and support didn’t reach even 35 percent until 1999.

Furthermore, the setbacks are not consistent across the board. The National Crime Victimization Survey, which captures more incidents than police reports, has shown a dramatic decrease in forcible rape and sexual assault since the 1970s. Rates of domestic violence have also fallen almost steadily. Partnered heterosexual men have continued to increase their contributions to the core domestic housework that men used to be derided for doing, and approval of men’s greater involvement in infant and childcare continues to grow. After falling almost continuously from the early 1990s to 2014, then rising during the pandemic, violent crime and murder rates‚ where young men tend to be the primary offenders, plummeted in 2024 and the first half of 2025.We also need to acknowledge and address the very mixed messages men get from many heterosexual women about what’s appropriate and attractive.

So we know that we’ve made progress in many areas, and we have to figure out how to explain to people that we do understand their sense of loss, but they are being nostalgic for the wrong parts of the postwar era. And in doing so, we need better ways to distinguish between men who consciously adopt misogynistic and abusive practices and men who behave in ways that may be offensive to equality-oriented women but are either accepted or outright rewarded by many other women. We also need to acknowledge and address the very mixed messages men get from many heterosexual women about what’s appropriate and attractive.

There are men and women who are unreachable on these questions. But for most people, I think we have a better chance of changing inegalitarian mindsets and behaviors if we can help people understand how historical conditioning and current structural constraints, not consciously evil intentions, make it hard for both men and women to act on our best impulses and identify our own blind spots or bad habits.

So it all depends on how you define optimism. I understand why people get impatient with the pace of change, and I don’t deny the very real dangers inherent in these recent setbacks. But I reject the idea that there’s anything inherently anti-egalitarian in men — or inherently egalitarian in women. The tremendous range of gender behaviors and values we’ve seen throughout history makes it clear that we have more leeway than we’re often told about how to organize our gender and sexual relationships. But we also have a huge accumulation of ideas and institutions that reinforce inequality, so the kind of equality we want is not going to happen overnight. And the more we can historicize — as opposed to pathologize — the struggles we have in our personal relationships, the better chance we have of developing relationships that can support us personally as we struggle to build a more supportive society.

15 August 2025

Source: Jacobin.

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Stephanie Coonz is director of research and public education at the Council on Contemporary Families and a professor emerita at the Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. Her forthcoming book is For Better and Worse: The Problematic Past and Challenging Future of Marriage.

Meagan Day is an associate editor at Jacobin. She is the coauthor of Bigger than Bernie: How We Go from the Sanders Campaign to Democratic Socialism.



International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.



MORE ON STEPHANIE COONZ



Thursday, March 13, 2025

Against Left Pronatalism

Social Democracy Won’t Defeat Capitalism Or Patriarchy


Sunday 9 March 2025, by Robin Peterson


Neoliberalism enforces family responsibility with a cruel logic: a couple who can’t afford rent without both their incomes are a couple who stick together. A young adult who can’t afford college without student loans is a child who remains bound to her parent. Lack of public spending on public goods forces poor and working-class people into economic dependence on their relatives. Meanwhile, for the rich, the private family is reinforced as a main conduit for wealth transmission.

Dustin Guastella is worried about birth rates. In a recent essay titled “In Pursuit of the Family,” this former national DSA leader argues that the nation is in decline, which can only be reversed by its citizens reproducing. [1] The convergence between Guastella and the US paleoconservative right, represented today by figures like Vice President JD Vance and Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts, is noteworthy. For those familiar with Guastella’s writing, particularly over the last five years, this may be unsurprising: he’s one of the loudest voices and bluntest thinkers of the right flank of the social-democratic left, and has long favored lopping off the “fringe” antioppression parts of the left’s platform. Guastella’s newly proclaimed pronatalism is of interest, first, because he is part of an increasingly influential tendency on the US left and, second, because the pronatalist right now holds decisive political power. [2]

Guastella argues that the US left should advocate raising the national birth rate—that is, increasing the number of babies born to native-born citizens. He sees this as a way to address both economic concerns (such as the Social Security funding cliff) and social ones (such as loneliness among the elderly). In a neat elision of women’s role in reproduction that he maintains throughout the piece, Guastella states that families provide babies. Moreover, he maintains that encouraging family formation is the best way to teach altruism. Guastella reasons that we ought to pass social-democratic policies because they are profamily (and prosocial). Conversely, the virtuous family spirit will be conducive to achieving social democracy, since unions and other mass organizations are best built by altruistic individuals.

We’ve been hearing something similar from the new vice president. As Vance said in a speech at the 2025 March for Life, “We failed a generation, not only by permitting a culture of abortion on demand, but also by neglecting to help young parents achieve the ingredients they need to lead a happy and meaningful life…It is the task of our government to make it easier for young moms and dads to afford to have kids.” One can hear Vance positioning himself in “opposition” to neoliberalism in his reference to the government’s failure to encourage nuclear family life. This break is not new: there have been aspects of it in Trump’s protectionist stances, for example. Trump’s politics owe something to 1990s Republican contender and paleoconservative standard bearer Pat Buchanan. Vance’s have an even greater affinity to the right’s paleoconservative wing; he leans hard into pronatalism (also a signature issue for Buchanan). But although newly empowered paleoconservatives like Vance and Kevin Roberts talk about investment in parents (and in other things like national infrastructure), their intention is to invest only in a particular family form, and it won’t go any way toward making society more free and equal. [3]

Guastella sounds like JD Vance Lite. This isn’t necessarily his intention. A Millennial on the Bernie-adjacent left could end up at economic nationalism and social conservatism if they simply stopped their ears to the anti-oppression demands of liberation movements. While the work of feminists, welfare-rights militants, antiwar activists, and many other movements that flowered in the 1960s and 70s is still crucial to the progressive left today, the transformative potential of these groups’ critiques—among whose targets were the family and the nation—won’t be fulfilled automatically. The first step is to listen to them. Valuing these antioppression demands is precisely what Guastella argues against.

Although Guastella writes as though to a gender-neutral audience, his proposal for family promotion has far greater consequences for women—who, after all, are the ones who “provide” babies and are (still) largely the ones who care for them. Guastella never mentions the ongoing struggle against the denial of women’s reproductive rights. His omissions are convenient: the ugly, coercive side of a pronatalist state is best left out of the picture, because if we don’t all agree that women’s interest is in having a family, his whole economic plan for the nation falls apart. There is no clear method for reversing birth rate trends in developed countries and the notion that a society with a below-replacement-level birth rate is a society on the decline, are ideological claims that we should not accept. What is certain is that a society in which women have reproductive and sexual freedom will only be achieved by disrupting the current and longstanding social order.

Trying to recreate midcentury social democracy, as Guastella wants the left to do, won’t help defeat either capitalism or patriarchy. Guastella’s familialism and nationalism is in fact symptomatic of a conservative, “tradition”-preserving tendency within capitalism itself, which needs this type of institution. Redistribution of wealth among families (at least, according to a certain standard of what constitutes a legitimate family), leaves the family’s key function intact: to pass down wealth, to reproduce class (and race and gender inequality). Social democracy need not get in the way of capitalism: a little social protection from market forces for those with: “a stake in the future of our country,” as Vance frames it, may even help capitalism continue to reproduce itself.

In this political moment, the progressive left should not back off its ambitions, or sell out its most vulnerable members, but should at every turn seek to present alternatives to both the increasingly bankrupt liberal order and a vindictive far right bent on reversing all efforts to eliminate traditional hierarchies. The major divisions among the working class, including race and gender, are the ones we should focus on bridging.

Because Guastella’s views overlap with those of the party in power as well as a growing portion of the liberal-centrist left, it is useful to understand his analytical failures as well as the points at which he abandons commitments to the liberation of oppressed groups. Below, I will deconstruct Guastella’s claim that the family is an antidote to individualism and neoliberal market logic—two things he collapses into one. Firstly, to elevate the family as against individualism takes liberal ideology at face value. A little inquiry reveals that the original framework of liberalism overlooks the situation of women: the very idea of the autonomous individual is premised on women’s denial of autonomy (via women’s attachment to the family). Second, I will turn to Guastella’s other attempt to oppose family values to something the left agrees is bad: the unfettered market forces of neoliberalism. Once again we find that his reliance on the most basic conventional wisdom has led him astray: as left theorist Melinda Cooper has shown, family responsibility is a constitutive goal of neoliberal state policy in the US. If counteracting neoliberalism is the goal, a left “embrace” of the family won’t accomplish it. Overall, in surveying what Guastella gets wrong, I will attempt to make plain the antifeminism of a pro-family, pronatalist politics.

However, before we undertake that journey, we must understand the context of Guastella’s reactionary turn. Different left fractions are currently vying to determine the direction of the progressive coalition that coalesced around Bernie’s presidential runs under the “big tent” of the DSA. Guastella is among those who want to shift the progressive agenda away from antioppression demands—which is also the lesson some liberals drew from the Democrats’ November defeat. [4] It is unlikely to be a winning strategy in the short term, and is certain to fail the socialist goal of defeating capitalism.

We should not interpret demobilization as equivalent to acceptance of the status quo.
Left Defeat and Left Reaction

Today Guastella professes surprise that leftists would critique the family, and complains about the “antisocial” character of the progressive left. [5]He frames his call for promoting family formation with a morbid account of a Japanese man’s lonely, long-unnoticed death, and threatens that we as individuals and as a nation will meet the same fate if we don’t get to work marrying and bearing children. [6] Contrast these grumpy opinions with where he was at a few years ago: then he was a leader of the Philadelphia DSA chapter, and served a term on the DSA national leadership—he was elected at its 2017 convention, which I attended. At that time he was a proponent of the DSA making the Medicare for All campaign its priority. What happened?

The question is less interesting as a portrait of Guastella, whose half-baked thinkpieces are all over the internet for anyone who wants to retrace his career, and more interesting when we look at what this political shift says about the progressive US left today. In my view, that left has not yet recovered and regrouped from Bernie’s 2020 defeat. This includes the DSA, the organization I belong to and have helped lead (including as Chicago chapter cochair from 2019 to 2021). The Bernie coalition that the DSA participated in was broad and driven by a social-democratic vision. When that apparent window of political opportunity closed, the coalition dispersed. The DSA, as an organization, has not yet been able to grapple with the difficulty that Bernie’s loss presents for its various theories of social change.

The popular, unifying demand for universal healthcare serves as an example: there is no strategy for achieving this goal in the DSA or among the broader progressive left at present. It has not yet been possible to recohere the groups of activists who worked on campaigns such as Medicare for All to formulate a new strategy. The founding assumptions of the M4A campaign, and others, have been scuttled by the dramatic political shifts of the past five years.

The progressive (or, as some prefer, socialist) left has become a more unstable quantity since the DSA ceased to be its level-setter. With the exception of a new bump as of last November, its member count and participation rate have dropped off since 2021. Consequently, it no longer serves the center-defining role that it did from 2016 to 2020. We should not interpret demobilization as equivalent to acceptance of the status quo. For some who’ve lost badly and can no longer see a way to win, temporarily sitting out the “fight” is the best option. However, another response to defeat is to modify the goal. We should treat this second option with a great deal of scrutiny.

There has been a conspicuous shift in online left discourse post-Bernie. [7] There is a new inclination to critique that thing, until recently called “identity politics,” and now referred to as “wokeism” or “DEI.” On a January 29 Jacobin Radio podcast on wokeness, Vivek Chibber states that this phenomenon “comes out of a historical process of trying to stamp out the socialist left.” [ [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/confronting-capitalism-the-end-of-wokeness/id791564318?i=1000686682682 ]] A February 4 article on UnHerd titled “The Left Won’t Let Go of Woke” suggests that the social media mobbing of Chibber post-podcast is proof that wokeness is the ideology of the “professional,” “identitarian” left. [8] The proliferation of such attacks is disturbing, not because liberal identity politics is beyond critique, but because of their caricature of the positions they criticize and their orientation toward pushing their proponents out of the left coalition. It is hard to find anything positive in developments that bring prominent left voices into collaboration with rightwingers. Jacobin founding editor Bhaskar Sunkara has been publicly friendly with Compact magazine founder and “postliberal” Catholic conservative Sohrab Ahmari, even speaking at his August 2023 book launch. Compact itself—which combines a (narrowly defined) pro-worker perspective with social conservatism and nationalism—is exemplary of this blurring boundary between left and right. Many Jacobin authors have published in it, and both publications share one columnist, Ben Burgis. The DSA’s analysis and vision were always partial, as is true of any democratic social movement. But these new calls for a left economic agenda shorn of its antiracist, feminist, and internationalist tenets would, if adopted, substantially shrink that vision.

What magazines publish doesn’t have a one-to-one relationship with what most people think. I don’t know of any such change in DSA members’ politics. That said, Guastella’s political convergence with the paleoconservative right on pronatalism does accord with a certain understanding of the left project. When you notice his investment in the period of postwar social democracy, you can begin to intuit how a similarly situated DSA progressive could go in his political direction. [9] For a downwardly mobile Millennial child of Boomer parents, the frustrated desire to have the same standard of living as one’s parents can and has led to working-class consciousness. But this can easily shade into the yearning to live in the same America as they did—which, politically speaking is reactionary when untempered by other influences.

Guastella’s blinkered view may find an audience; the progressive left that has been on its back foot since the late 70s and has seen public goods continually slashed as the goal of fully funded social-democratic programs has receded into the horizon. It is also largely made up of people of the Millennial generation or younger, who came to the left via their own radicalization, and have no personal experience in—or interpersonal, cross-generational connection to—those ’60s movements. Furthermore, the bifurcation between class politics and identity politics that has stymied the progressive left since 1980 continues to hold strong. [10] These circumstances contribute to making the compromises of social democracy appear acceptable—at least when they are presented as the only alternative to our current political reality.

However, the height of social democracy in the United States was not an Edenic golden age. Study of the social-democratic period and its end will likely show us, first, that reversing some of our new circumstances is not possible, and second, that reversing others is not desirable. The late ’60s, with its high level of left mobilization and radical ferment, was not a time of contentment: women didn’t like being cast as a dependent on their husband’s breadwinner wage, welfare recipients didn’t accept being subject to degrading interrogations and surveillance by state officials as a condition of aid, and students rejected universities’ in loco parentis rules, which policed sexuality and gender norms by way of curfews and dress codes. In the postwar social order, longstanding racial and gender hierarchies of US society took a particular form, in the social norm of the Fordist family wage. This norm inscribed a middle-class male worker at the top of the social hierarchy. During this time numerous left movements, as diverse as the working class itself, demanded liberation and, in doing so, challenged this norm. Most of those demands remain unmet.

Nostalgia for social democracy was never the sum total, nor even the dominant impulse of the 2016 to 2020 Bernie left. It worked in coalition with and included many leftists whose political priority was the liberation of oppressed groups. [11] Antioppression demands are indispensable—they are the interventions that sharpen our strategy and take us beyond a dead-end reformism. We must not make it our goal to claw our way back to midcentury social democracy—to do so would recodify oppressive social hierarchies whose Fordist basis has been repudiated and to a great extent dissolved. To carry the point through: to attend to feminist critiques of the family and of pronatalism is not, as Guastella contends, to elevate “fringe” elements of a left agenda—it is to value the interventions of crucial allies in the anticapitalist struggle.

The “individual” and the “family” are historically specific concepts that arose together.
A Man Deplores Individualism While Women Struggle for Personhood

Guastella’s writing is brisk and smug, like an unscrupulous salesman. He never defines key terms (such as family), marshals evidence for his claims that doesn’t actually support them, and brushes off potential interlocutors by grossly mischaracterizing their arguments. [12] This is easy enough for him to do when he is arguing that the family is a good—that is, something that most people believe already. Canards and cliches abound on this topic, and Guastella makes much use of them. My approach is therefore not to address his argument point by point—its flimsiness is obvious enough to anyone who reads it—but to tease out the concepts that he vilifies in contrast to the family. These can show us something about the contemporary discourse about families and childbearing.

Guastella falls into a common trap for those whose political vision is backward-looking: everything newfangled looks to him like the enemy. He spares no time or attention for the hopeful possibilities of connection in the twenty-first century, such as “chosen family,” the urban intermingling of races and classes, or queer intimacies that defy the norms of middle-class respectability. All he can see when he looks upon contemporary US society is a sea of alienation and meaninglessness. When he tries to explain why we went adrift, he variously blames it on a dominant “market logic” (something like the neoliberal rationality), the philosophical concept of liberal individualism, and, in a real throwback, “unchecked consumerism” in the form of people buying dishwashers and microwaves. The full force of his nostalgia can be felt in his longing for a predishwasher era. He collapses these distinct phenomena into a single caricature.

Guastella makes an important and common error when he contrasts familial altruism with the “vice” of individualism. This adopts both the erroneous theorization of the individual as separate from the family and the uncritical conception of the autonomy of the individual as conceived by liberalism. In that, he ignores (or willfully mischaracterizes) a broad swath of Marxist feminist critique that shows the fallacy of the individualism-versus-family values opposition.

The “individual” and the “family” are historically specific concepts that arose together—just as we know that, for every person who strides forth confidently and independently into the public world, they were supported and propped up by somebody at some point (probably that morning). The individual’s autonomy is the flipside of the individual’s dependence on and responsibility for his family.

In classical liberal theory, as Wendy Brown writes in “Liberalism’s Family Values,” women were imagined as attached to and subordinate to a man and obligated to children. They were not granted the status of individuals. Instead their bonds enabled the men they supported to act as autonomous free agents in the public sphere. [13]

The autonomy of the individual is a construct of liberalism, the dominant ideology of capitalism. Marxists know that liberalism imagines free contractual relations only by ignoring unfreedoms in the broader social context. For example, when a worker takes a low-wage job because their other option is eviction and homelessness, this is hardly a choice. Liberalism is premised on the steadfastness of certain unspoken illiberal bonds—obligations that are not optional. Women’s work in the home for the family is one of those bonds that the liberal story of individual autonomy conceals. This hidden, uncompensated labor—known by Marxist feminists as social reproduction—includes the daily care, feeding, generational birthing, and rearing of workers. Capital couldn’t exploit workers without it. To justify this gendered division of labor, liberal family values encourage selflessness for women: to this day the family is premised on women finding their fulfillment in service to the family. Liberal familialism is thus structurally oppressive to women as a gender.

The structural nature of that oppression is key, and it is one of the most glaring omissions in Guastella’s discussion of the family. A husband and father himself, Guastella must understand that the production of babies requires the labor of women, but he spends more time extolling the reward of family life than he does thinking about the burdens it places on women (and of course, a man would). Indeed, he barely mentions feminism or the gendered division of labor and seems to be both ignorant of feminist critiques of the family and uninterested in learning what they are, much less addressing them.

Women are still struggling for the autonomy that liberal individualism grants and attributes to men. The family, as a unit of social reproduction, is a primary site of that struggle. Right now, the United States denies women their basic human rights by criminalizing abortion in two-fifths of states, on the basis of the state interest in “fetal life.” As we’ve long known, when a legal system and health system deny women reproductive care, it harms women’s health, even to the point of death. Moreover, abortion bans deprive women of bodily autonomy. The state’s current orientation is toward protecting “fetal life” over that of the woman carrying it. Guastella’s family promotion proposal begs the question: which comes first, the abstraction of the birth rate and the supposed revitalization of the national economy through raising it, or women’s value as people rather than reproductive vessels? You can’t have both.

Guastella’s pronatalism trods obliviously on women’s status as persons. In effect, his proposal conscripts women into the work of making babies as a duty to the nation. In the gendered division of labor that we live with, childbearing is a form of labor that only women can do. Childrearing is a form of labor that is still mostly done by women, and men rarely do it alone (single father-headed households are a small minority of those raising children). Absent the socialization of childbearing and rearing, calls to raise the birth rate are dictates to women about their life’s path. On this basis, there is a strong feminist case against any scheme that holds up raising the birth rate as a solution to problems of the economy or of national “vitality.” While it is doubtful that a pronatalist policy program would improve the economy as working-class people experience it, it is certain that such a program will diminish women’s freedom and deepen their subordination.

Ultimately, promoting the institution of the family as a good is antifeminist, because it demands women’s social reproductive labor, while simultaneously concealing and devaluing it. If the family is the institution to uphold, then everything possible must be done to direct women’s self-expression to a maternal role—including, when necessary and when politically feasible, denying women bodily autonomy. Nevertheless, conservatives continue stumping for the joys of family life because their project can’t get anywhere without some cooperation from women. This is why the pronatalist paleoconservatives such as Vance hold that the one indispensable source of self-fulfillment in life is in sacrificing oneself for family and children. Against this claim, feminists insist that women must have the right to follow their own interests, desires, and aspirations even if these don’t include childbearing.

Neoliberalism enforces family responsibility with a cruel logic: a couple who can’t afford rent without both their incomes are a couple who stick together.
Family Values Whether You Like Them or Not

Guastella seems to be frustrated by nuance, which is a good reason not to appoint him strategist for our movement. This is on full view in his treatment of Melinda Cooper’s argument in Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism. According to him, Cooper “argues that neoliberalism is not a regime built around the individual, but one built around the family.” He counters that “families dissolved in the neoliberal era,” and exposure to market forces is to blame. [14]

The relationship between neoliberalism and the institution of the family is not so simple as this. As Cooper clearly and inexorably demonstrates, the family was neither targeted by neoliberals for destruction, nor neglected. The view that the family is a mere victim or casualty of neoliberalism is simply wrong. Rather, promoting family responsibility is a constitutive goal of neoliberalism, one that has guided US state policy in the era from the 1970s to the present. [15]

Guastella doesn’t give any sign of having read Cooper’s book, much less engaging with her argument, which explains why his thinking doesn’t extend beyond the oft-repeated sentiment that neoliberalism is “hard on families.” There is a kernel of truth to this. More state funding of public goods would benefit everyone, including parents and children. But this cliche doesn’t tell us whose families, in what way it is hard, by what mechanisms, what reasons the neoliberals give for inflicting it, or whose interests “making it difficult” may serve. As Cooper recounts, family values were central to the concerns of US neoliberals. The chief initiator of British neoliberalism, Margaret Thatcher, was herself arguing in favor of the (family) value of mutual obligation when she made the famous “no such thing [as society]” statement that Guastella misconstrues. This should give pause to any serious left thinker sympathetic to Guastella’s proposal to promote the family as a “good,” and should inspire us to review such a proposal with scrutiny.

Neoliberalism enforces family responsibility with a cruel logic: a couple who can’t afford rent without both their incomes are a couple who stick together. A young adult who can’t afford college without student loans is a child who remains bound to her parent. Lack of public spending on public goods forces poor and working-class people into economic dependence on their relatives. Meanwhile, for the rich, the private family is reinforced as a main conduit for wealth transmission. In the context of neoliberalism, promoting family responsibility is a means of increasing the wealth and power of the asset-owning and business classes, while tying the hands of poor and working-class people, by overloading them with private household debt that forms what Cooper calls intergenerational “webs of economic obligation.”

Neoliberals reached back to the Elizabethan Poor Laws, and their corollaries in the American colonies, to find precedent for punitive family responsibility. But to find assumptions about family structure baked into state policy, they didn’t have to go back so far. The idea that the state is filling in for an absent family member—usually, a wage-earning man who headed the household—is a recurrent premise within welfare history in the United States. In the Progressive Era, activists secured “mothers’ pensions” at the state and local level by arguing that (white) mothers should receive public aid in order to promote children’s welfare and ease the burden of raising children without a male income. The welfare state’s creation with the New Deal and expansion with the Social Security Act still divided its programs along class, gender, and racial lines. Women who fit the norms of respectability—having been married to a man who earned enough to pay into Social Security—received aid from the higher-status federally administered Social Security program. Never-married single mothers got Aid to Dependent Children (ADC, later AFDC)—a lower-status program administered by the states, which, in the 40s and 50s, loaded up the program with administrative roadblocks designed to police its recipients’ morality. These included “man-in-the-house” rules barring women from receiving benefits if they were in a sexual relationship with a man.

As Cooper observes, state imposition of family values was not limited to the neoliberal era, nor perpetrated solely by the right. Up until the 1960s, Democrats and Republicans were both in favor of redistributive social welfare, as doled out according to the principle of the Fordist family wage. (As we will see shortly, that consensus would fall apart by the mid-70s, marking the end of the social-democratic era and the beginning of the neoliberal one.) In the tumultuous period of the 60s and early 70s, prominent voices on both the left and right located the cause of pressing social problems in the Black family, which they saw as having been weakened by a number of factors including the incentives of a welfare system that disincentivized marriage and male breadwinning. Daniel Patrick Moynihan wrote in his infamous report that the “pathological” female-led Black family structure was the root cause of Black poverty and crime. [16] Many on the left objected to Moynihan’s statements about the causes of Black people’s disadvantage—yet they broadly agreed with his conclusion that both the means of remedying that disadvantage and the end goal of its redress would involve repairing the Black family. [17] Toward this end, liberals thought the administration and incentive structure of welfare could be manipulated to encourage the male breadwinner family model. Thus, in the age of welfare state expansion, liberals saw the welfare state as a means to encourage the formation and stability of traditionally structured families.

If we jump ahead to Bill Clinton’s signing of TANF into law in 1996, we see similar messaging for a markedly different public policy. Temporary Aid for Needy Families (TANF) was a piece of welfare reform legislation that rolled back (redistributive) payments to low-income households, making benefits both temporary and dependent on work requirements. Once again, the stated goal—this time the goal that reducing public spending on welfare was intended to accomplish—was to strengthen families by strengthening family responsibility.

Promoting the family, then, was an explicit goal of two drastically different policies: welfare-state redistribution and antiredistributive neoliberal policies. The history of state welfarism’s interventions in regard to the family is sobering: time and again, it has determined deserving versus undeserving recipients based on their fulfillment of family responsibility. It is largely a story of state-imposed family values, rather than the state’s enablement of a variety of different ways of life. [18]

The progressive left should heed the calls of the women of the 1960s welfare rights movement to stop using a moralistic, racist schema to separate the deserving from the undeserving poor. Moynihan was wrong to locate the source of social problems, such as poverty, in a particular Black family structure; it is equally wrongheaded to blame loneliness among the elderly and the lack of social provision for end-of-life care on the chosen childlessness of young adults. Guastella demonstrates the limits of this type of chauvinistic outlook: when he posits that “strong family life, in any given society, is not contrary to progress but coincident with it,” he defines progress as nothing more than his own reflection. [19]

The family is only one form of sociality, one way of human life. People are inventing other ways of life all the time. These are legitimate too even if they don’t involve bearing or raising children. To suggest that society is only making progress when people are forming families is to delegitimate whatever doesn’t fit your definition of a family. To say families are the best place to learn altruism and selflessless is to say by implication that non-family-forming individuals are selfish. These charges are both untrue and counterproductive for the progressive left project. As feminists such as Michele Barrett and Mary McIntosh have pointed out, it is the family that is antisocial, insofar as its dominance discourages the formation of other, more collective human connections. [20] References to history reinforce this point, since we find that the notion of private family relations as the place to learn and express altruism is a middle-class ideology, which emerged in the Gilded Age to justify that class’s withdrawal from broader social responsibility [21]

The left fights for a freer and more equal world. Regarding the family, it should support policies that free people from the need to reproduce oppressive family structures and dynamics. Among the means of doing so, encouraging solidaristic social bonds that cross and transcend families will be one of the most important. Valorization of the private family is a cause of atomization, rather than a cure. Against Guastella’s call for “more and stronger families,” we should call for more and stronger solidarities.

…given that the left is not a monolith, whose interests are served by viewing social democracy as the be-all end-all and advocating that left try to make its way back there? Why not imagine a different way of life, that creates new structures of care instead of reproducing unequal and oppressive ones????
A Fighting Left and a Smaller Role for the Family

The particular form of redistributive state welfare that poor and working-class people enjoyed in the mid-twentieth century has ceased to be. The left needs to understand why, to inform our strategy in the long-term fight against capitalism. I disagree with Guastella when he argues that we should pursue a quixotic effort to recreate postwar material conditions, and with him and other leftists when they dismiss and disparage left critiques of hierarchies other than class. If we study the social-democratic period and its end, we will find much to learn from the radical antioppression movements that came into being then, particularly in the 60s and 70s. The experiences that motivated these struggles, their strategies, their theoretical critiques, and their outcomes are all instructive. If the progressive left’s goal is to enable greater human freedom and equality, then we ought to pay attention to historical moments when these things were struggled for in a militant way, and sometimes (even if only briefly) achieved.

One edifying example is the welfare rights movement. During the ’60s, through the efforts of welfare recipients in the National Welfare Rights Organization and civil rights lawyers, many state-level welfare rules were overturned. Per Supreme Court decisions such as King v. Smith, states could no longer use “man-in-the-house” or similar intrusive rules to prevent women from receiving federal welfare benefits. This led to a window of time when federal welfare came without (familial) strings attached: a moment of what we might identify as a true increase in freedom for poor women—­­­especially for Black women, targeted by these rules. The welfare mothers’ victories got under the skin of neoliberal economists and social conservatives. Their obsessional grudge against AFDC is revealing: these people didn’t want women, especially poor Black women, to evade the social norm of the Fordist family wage. For these women to have the means to live and raise children without having to give up (to name one important example) sexual freedom, was read as betokening the collapse of the social order.

Looking back, it appears that these observers had cause to be nervous—at least for themselves. At that time, federal policies were weakening inherited wealth’s class-determining power—that is, in other words, weakening the family. Moreover, radical movements were trying to level social hierarchies and explode their justifications. Both liberal and neoconservative thinkers connected the supposed excess, irresponsibility, and libertinism of these movements to the (perceived) crisis of inflation. It bears underscoring: this fear of social change was not limited to the right. Efforts to preserve the current order also spoke to the interests of liberals, insofar as they were not at the bottom of its hierarchies. As Cooper details, starting in the late 60s, both liberal and neoconservative thinkers honed in on the primary concerns and assumptions of neoliberalism, while converging in their thinking and goals. They then worked in concert to turn the political tide against redistributive welfare and Keynesian federal spending, and toward the gutting of the public sector that we now recognize as a defining aspect of neoliberalism. In other words, the reaction was so significant that it seems to continue to this day. Crucially, neoliberals have insistently emphasized the family as a corrective to excess, irresponsibility, and libertinism.

Given this context, we must interrogate Guastella’s investment in the family, especially a normative family consisting of two married parents and their children. I don’t think Guastella spent much reflecting on these issues before gracing us with his essay, but we need to consider his convergence with both a newly ascendent reactionary paleoconservatism and a neoliberal political project that’s been immiserating working-class people for the last half-century. Moreover, given that the left is not a monolith, whose interests are served by viewing social democracy as the be-all end-all and advocating that left try to make its way back there? Why not imagine a different way of life, that creates new structures of care instead of reproducing unequal and oppressive ones?

To envision a society that is equal and free for all people, the progressive left must incorporate radical critiques of institutions and ways of life that are near and dear to some of us. I’ve sought to demonstrate ways that political demands from some of the segments of the working class that are the most oppressed, such as poor Black women, sharpen our analysis of capitalism and point a way forward in our fight for freedom for all.

I hope that few DSA leftists will fool themselves into thinking that pronatalist economic nationalism constitutes progressive politics. I have dwelt in this essay on the subordination of women that this scheme assumes and reinforces. It is clear—perhaps even more viscerally—that it also punishes immigrants. Guastella scoffs at the concept of open borders and what he flippantly describes as the idea that we should “import” babies rather than invest in making them. Vance and Trump, of course, are currently enacting an ostentatiously cruel anti-immigrant program, and claim to be arresting hundreds of undocumented immigrants each day. Guastella shares the paleoconservatives’ desire to maintain the subordination of undocumented immigrants in the hierarchy of citizenship. Though immigrants and refugees are members of US society, in Guastella’s scheme they literally don’t count (for population numbers), and by implication their interests are discounted. The same is true for other people who reside on this planet outside US borders. At a time when new international solidarity is needed to confront capitalism’s global crises, such as pandemics and climate change, this is an especially wrongheaded view. Trying to solve US workers’ woes in the twenty-first century by narrowing the focus to the nation and the family is the strategic equivalent of billionaires buying islands to hide out in; it simply sells out everyone not on our metaphorical island.

Finally, if Guastella’s aim is to water down progressive demands to make the left more approachable, this too is a losing proposition. This would have the effect of making us less distinct from both liberal centrists (whose politics seem to be fast losing their appeal) and right-wing socially conservative nationalists (who will always beat us at the game Guastella wants us to play). While Guastella presumes that “profamily” is an enduringly common-sense, populist position, the progressive left shouldn’t accept this. It’s not simply a matter of rhetoric: how the left frames its program both demonstrates its commitments and educates its members. Feminist critiques of familialism and pronatalism counsel us not to accept elisions of women’s labor in our economic schemes. By demanding that we do not default to the family but continue to come up with other ways of organizing how we reproduce ourselves, they keep our vision transformative, which is what we need. If welfare militants won gains in the 60s, leftists today, with the perspective of that struggle’s history, can win new freedoms as well. To that end, the progressive left’s vision needs to stay capacious enough to include the goal of defeating capitalism as well as its specific oppressions. Guastella’s framework does neither, so we should reject it. The left can do better than JD Vance Lite.

Spectre

P.S.


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Footnotes


[1] Dustin Guastella, “In Pursuit of the Family,” Damage, November 18, 2024,https://damagemag.com/2024/11/18/in....


[2] Dustin Guastella, “Where Do We Go After Last Night’s Defeat,” Jacobin, March 11, 2020, https://jacobin.com/2020/03/bernie-...; Jordy Cummings, “From the Socialism of Fools to Social Democracy in One Country: Averting the Red/Brown Temptation,“ Spectre, July 21, 2020, https://spectrejournal.com/from-the....


[3] Emma Green, “The New Pro-Life Playbook,” New Yorker, November 11, 2024, https://www.newyorker.com/mag... .


[4] Maureen Down, “Democrats and the Case of Mistaken Identity Politics,” New York Times, November 9, 2024, https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/09/....


[5] Dustin Guastella, “Anti-Social Socialism Club,” Damage, March 22, 2023, https://damagemag.com/2023/03/22/an....


[6] Guastella, “In Pursuit of the Family.”


[7] Additional examples to this trend than the ones listed below can be found in Janakiram and Lessards “Tradwives and Femcels.” Emily Janakiram and Megan Lessard, “Tradwives and Femcels: The Women of the New Right Work Hard to Make Marriage Edgy Again,” Lux, no. 8 (2023): https://lux-magazine.com/article/tr....


[8] Catherine Liu, “The Left won’t let go of Woke: So much for the ‘vibe shift,’” UnHerd, February 4, 2025, https://unherd.com/2025/02/the-left...] Over at the more reactionary Quillette, we find a self-identified conservative writing “Trump and the DEI Revolution,” an approving commentary on Trump’s evisceration of federal DEI and affirmative action. [https://quillette.com/2025/02/08/trump-and-the-dei-counter-revolution-affirmative-action-civil-rights/.


[9] Dustin Guastella, “Is Nostalgia a Dead End?” Jacobin, February 4, 2024, https://jacobin.com/2024/02/postwar....


[10] Lisa Duggan, The Twilight of Equality?: Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics, and the Attack on Democracy, (Beacon Press, 2003), xv–xvi.


[11] https://midwestsocialist.com/2018/04/15/how-should-socialists-organize-reflections-on-the-lift-the-ban-campaign/


[12] From his call to raise the marriage rate as well as the birth rate, we can infer that Guastella has something like the two-parent household in mind. For purposes of my opposition to family-promotion, I mean the institution within and by which the rich build up their wealth and keep it to themselves, and the institution that divides and opposes the interests of people by gender and age within households, and by race and class between them.


[13] Wendy Brown, “Liberalism’s Family Values,” in States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity (Princeton University Press, 1995), 135–65.


[14] Guastella, “In Pursuit of the Family.”


[15] Melinda Cooper, Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism (Zone Books, 2017).


[16] Office of Policy Planning and Research United States Department of Labor, “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action,” U.S Department of Labor, March, 1965, https://www.dol.gov/general/aboutdo....


[17] Cooper, Family Values, 40-42.


[18] A different outcome from state welfare programs is possible, however. These programs could meet people’s needs for economic support in such a way that depending financially on partners and relatives would no longer be necessary, or drastically less so. I believe there is liberatory potential in, for example, delinking romantic love from economic codependency, the better to allow it to flourish—a change that Engels and Kollontai might approve.


[19] Guastella, “In Pursuit of the Family.”


[20] Michele Barrett and Mary McIntosh, The Anti-social Family (Verso, 2015).


[21] Stephanie Coontz, The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap, (BasicBooks, 1992).



Robin Peterson
Robin Peterson is a writer living in Chicago. As a DSA member, she has been active in electoral work and campaigns against housing displacement.


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