Scottish Daily Mail

Muscular men ‘more likely to be right-wing’

- Daily Mail Reporter

MEN who are strong are more likely to take a right-wing stance, while weaker men support the welfare state, researcher­s claim.

Their study discovered a link between a man’s upper-body strength and their political views.

Scientists from Aarhus University in Denmark collected data on bicep size, socio-economic status and support for economic redistribu­tion from hundreds in America, Argentina and Denmark.

The figures revealed that men with higher upper-body strength were less likely to support left-wing policies on the redistribu­tion of wealth.

But men with low upper-body strength were more likely to put their own self-interest aside and support a welfare state. The researcher­s found no link between upper-body strength and redistri- bution opinions among women. Professor Michael Petersen said: ‘In all three countries, physically strong males consistent­ly pursued the self-interested position on redistribu­tion.

‘However physically weak males were more reluctant to assert their self-interest – just as if disputes over national policies were a matter of direct physical confrontat­ion between individual­s.

‘While many people think of politics as a modern phenomenon, it has, in a sense, always been with our species.

‘Political views are designed by natural selection to function in the conditions recurrent over human evolutiona­ry history.’

The findings were published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science.

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