Record 40% of young women want to flee US: poll
A new survey found that a record number of young women are interested in fleeing the U.S. and moving abroad permanently.Gallup recently found for the second year in a row...
By Fox News · Fox News
A new survey found that a record number of young women are interested in fleeing the U.S. and moving abroad permanently. Gallup recently found for the second year in a row that approximately one in five Americans say they would like to leave the U.S. and move to another country permanently. However, a growing number of young women expressed interest in fleeing the country. According to the polling firm, 40% of women ages 15 to 44 said they would move abroad permanently if given the opportunity. Gallup noted that in 2014, only one-quarter as many women of that age bracket expressed a desire to leave the country. FOX NEWS VOTER POLL: HOW SPANBERGER WON VIRGINIA GOVERNOR By contrast, 19% of the young women's male counterparts said they would like to leave the U.S. for good, marking what Gallup said was the widest gap it had recorded in this trend. Gallup also noted that few countries had shown this kind of gender gap in a desire to migrate since it started measuring the question globally in 2007. The polling firm said the first decisive increase in the number of young women looking to leave the U.S. occurred in 2016, as then-President Barack Obama's second term came to a close. The 2016 survey was conducted in June and July, after both parties chose their presumptive nominees for the presidential election . While the results seem to be political in nature, Gallup assessed that the results suggested a "broader shift" among young women rather than "a solely partisan one." 2025 FOX NEWS VOTER POLL The results of the survey come on the heels of an election in which Democratic candidates won big with voters from that same group. In the high-stakes Virginia gubernatorial race , Democrat Abigail Spanberger defeated Republican Winsome Earle-Sears. A Fox News poll found that Spanberger benefited from a significant gender gap with 65% of women casting their ballots for her, while just 35% of women voted for Earle-Sears. While Earle-Sears had higher support among men, the gap be…