Times Colonist

Swipe left if you voted Trump

Dating, both online and off, is more super-charged with politics than it has ever been

- ANGEL HART

In the treacherou­s, amusing and sometimes rewarding world of online dating, Donald Trump has become the newest way to find — or reject — a romantic match. “Did you vote for or do you support Trump? Then I’m not your man. It would never work,” one user says in the opener to his bio on Tinder, a popular mobile dating platform that boasts 26 million matches per day.

“Trump voters please swipe left, and go to your room and think about what you’ve done,” wrote another Tinder user, referring to the way to dismiss a potential date in the app.

“What I’m looking for … well, in this crazy day and age, first and foremost, someone who did not vote for Trump,” says a profile on Bumble, a dating app in which women make the first move.

Since his election, the U.S. president has become a new measure of compatibil­ity — much like someone’s age, religion, wanting kids or simply finding things in common. Dating, online and off, is more supercharg­ed with politics than it’s ever been, said online dating experts who specialize in matchmakin­g.

“His presidency has created this new deal-breaker,” said Laurie Davis Edwards, a relationsh­ip coach and founder of the website eflirtexpe­rt.com.

“I’ve never seen it like this before, where people say ‘no’ to Trump supporters, or they only want to date other Trump supporters,” she said. “It tells me that people are valuing politics much higher as a preference than they were before. … It’s another example of how massively our dating culture has changed over the past four years, partly because of politics and also because of technology.”

Tinder allows people 500 characters to write their profiles. For Bumble, it’s only 300. Since January, many are using that limited space to make it public how much they detest Donald Trump.

“Around the time of the election, we did see some people who would call out that they were Trump supporters, but since then, I don’t know if people necessaril­y need to say online that they support him — he’s the head of our nation whether you like it or not,” Davis Edwards said. “But I have clients all over the country, and people are saying: ‘If you’re a Trump supporter, swipe left.’ “

More people are dating online than ever before, according to data collected by the Pew Research Center last year.

Fifteen per cent of all Americans reported using an online dating site or mobile app, up from 11 per cent in 2013, and dating online has nearly tripled among 18- to 24year-olds over the same period.

It’s doubled for 55- to 64-yearolds, Pew found.

The outsized mention of Trump on dating sites could reflect the growing partisan divide across the U.S.

A separate 2016 Pew study on partisansh­ip and political animosity found that a person’s political beliefs say “a lot about the kind of person they are,” Pew found.

“Politics has moved into the bedroom,” said Julie Spira, a Los Angeles-based online dating coach who created cyberdatin­g expert.com.

“It’s important to discuss these things before you end up taking your clothes off or before you end up getting deeply involved with someone. People want a partner who is going to support your strong belief about what’s happening with the world.

“It’s a question of values … think about a woman who walked in the Women’s March and her boyfriend being a Trump supporter,” she added. “That can be very tense. … I’ve watched relationsh­ips break up and marriages fall apart because of Trump.”

The Trump factor appears to transcend gender, age and the political divide in Republican and Democrat states, the dating coaches said.

“It’s just that people are so opinionate­d about him,” Davis Edwards said. “I think that’s true wherever you are, and for both genders. … If you’re opinionate­d about him, you’re opinionate­d about him.”

Some Trump supporters say they’re less inclined to talk about who they voted for.

“It really does suck,” said Alexandra Gonzalez, 22, who lives in Sacramento and voted for Trump. “It’s something that I don’t necessaril­y say on a first date or even a second date. … With such a controvers­ial topic, it’s something that I tend to veer away from.”

Match.com analyzed dating activity before and after Trump’s election. It found that during January, typically the most active time for dating platforms, activity declined in the most Democratic counties, while dating activity increased in the most Republican counties.

“Not only are liberals signing up at a lower rate, but they’re also engaging less,” Match said in an email. Match has a term for this: the “love deficit.” And it’s more significan­t under Trump than it was during Barack Obama’s presidency.

“Four years ago, after the reelection of President Obama, all areas — blue and red — had an increase in dating activity, showing that the ‘love deficit’ between liberals and conservati­ves is unique to this election,” Match said.

On the day of the Women’s March, for example, Match saw a nearly one-third drop in new signups by females.

The site’s data also underscore what dating experts are seeing: 60 per cent of singles say they are less open to dating across party lines than two years ago. It’s starker among liberals. Conservati­ves are 57 per cent more likely to date across party lines.

But if you voted for Trump last election, you might have limited your dating pool.

Match found that 91 per cent of liberals say they judge potential dates negatively for having voted for Trump, and more than half said they’re more likely to ask about political views since the election.

“People are so divided in our country right now that they don’t even want to start a relationsh­ip with someone who they don’t agree with politicall­y. I’ve never seen it like this, ever,” Spira said. “Being on the same political page is more important to singles now than it has ever been in history. It used to be that dating a smoker was a top deal-breaker. That’s been replaced with politics.”

 ?? JOSE LUIS VILLEGAS, TNS ?? Sacramento’s Kristina Mishchuk, a conservati­ve, and Ali Mackani, a liberal, say their politics are a real considerat­ion in dating.
JOSE LUIS VILLEGAS, TNS Sacramento’s Kristina Mishchuk, a conservati­ve, and Ali Mackani, a liberal, say their politics are a real considerat­ion in dating.
 ??  ?? U.S. President Donald Trump has become a new measure of compatibil­ity since his election.
U.S. President Donald Trump has become a new measure of compatibil­ity since his election.

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