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Angry White Male (sometimes abbreviated as AWM) is the designation of a voting bloc of white males in the United States that came into use during and after the midterm elections of 1994 in which White males supported Republican candidates by a 24 % margin (compared to a 6 % margin in 1986 and a 4 % margin in 1990). Demographic characteristics of the group include males of working class or lower middle class status, who are 'angered' by:
- policies or actions in government, business, media, education, and other institutions that specifically support non-whites, women, gays, and other minorities - which they perceive as discrimination against white males and sometimes refer to as "reverse discrimination";
- movements such as environmentalism which they deem as inimical to their economic interests; and/or
- the cultural condescension of affluent "limousine liberals".
References
- Reeher, Grant, and Cammarano, Joseph. "In Search of the Angry White Male: Gender, Race, and Issues in the 1994 Elections." In Clinker, Philip. Midterm: The Elections of 1994 in Context. Boulder, Colorado: Westview, 1996, pp. 125-136.


