uber fuzz

Terms of Use

Majority of ‘Karens’ Voting for Joe Biden in 2020 Election, New York Times Polling Data Finds


Read More

Around 60% of people named Karen are voting for Joe Biden in the 2020 election, according to a collection of data gathered by the New York Times and Siena College.

After polling more than 17,000 likely voters in 18 battleground states since September, the Times decided to sort the accumulated data based on the most common first names and find any trends that the database provided. They sorted the 10 most common male names and the 10 most common female names and graphed how the data showed those polled planned to vote.

This approach found that the majority of people named Karen are planning to vote for Biden over President Donald Trump. Of the top 10 most common female names, Karens were joined by Barbaras, Lisas, Patricias, Elizabeths, Susans and Marys in favoring the Democratic presidential nominee, while the data suggested Nancys, Jennifers and Lindas tended to back Trump.

really didn’t expect biden to carry the coveted “karen” vote. huge implications for florida. pic.twitter.com/pFIJ16FDzs

— alex (@alex_abads) November 2, 2020

Stemming from the popular “Can I speak to a manager?” meme, the name Karen has become a pejorative slang term for entitled, and often racist, middle-aged white women who engage in flagrant displays of privilege. But the Times’ Karen findings reportedly have more to do with age than anything else.

“This is an age thing, not a meme thing,” the Times said. “Karens are a cross section of women ages 40 and up. The name entered the top 20 in 1941 and stayed there through 1971.”

Over the past year, the Karen moniker has been given to a number of white women who went viral after videos of their inappropriate or dangerous behavior surfaced online. Some notable examples include Amy Cooper, the “Central Park Karen” who called the police on a birdwatching Black man who asked her to leash her dog in a part of New York’s Central Park that required it, and Lisa Alexander, the “San Francisco Karen” who confronted a man who identifies as a person of color for writing “Black Lives Matter” in chalk on the front of his own home.

Last September, Tropical Storm Karen even inspired the internet to make memes poking fun at the storm’s name. “This Forecast Cone is an actual visual representation of the rising anger of everyone in line behind #Karen as she argues with the manager because her coupons are not working,” one Twitter user wrote.

This Forecast Cone is an actual visual representation of the rising anger of everyone in line behind #Karen as she argues with the manager because her coupons are not working. pic.twitter.com/uMIhtbou4t

— 🧈MeltLikeButta🧈 (@JWButta) September 22, 2019

The Times also provided a searchable graph of the 102 most common names and the reported voting preference, of those who responded to its recent polling.

Sorting its polling data by the most common first names of respondences, NYT found Barbaras, Lisas and Patricias are also more likely to back blue