Submission   39,028

Part of a series on Neoliberalism. [View Related Entries]


ADVERTISEMENT

About

Centrist Dad is a derogatory slang term for older, predominantly male
Twitter users, particularly in England, who ascribe to centrist and neoliberal beliefs and condescend to leftists as being unrealistic.

ADVERTISEMENT

Origin

While the exact moment "Centrist Dad" went from being a descriptor to a slang term is unclear, one of the earliest known tweets to use "Centrist Dads" as a trope was posted April 4th, 2017 by Twitter user @daniel_orton[1] (shown below).


Spread

Over the following months, "Centrist Dad" became a more common pejorative for centrist liberals, particularly those opposed to the rise of leftist Jeremy Corbyn in the Labour Party. One of the major proprietors in spreading the term appears to be Guardian columnist Dawn Foster. On August 11th, she created a Twitter poll that asked "Are you a Centrist Dad?"[2] The poll gained 792 votes (shown below). She was also interviewed in a piece on inews.co.uk[3] in which she explained that:

“It’s a term used to describe certain behaviour I’ve seen a lot more of since the EU referendum and especially the election… I found it a handy term, as lots of middle-aged men were endlessly in my mentions explaining that centrism was ‘grown up’ and ‘sensible’.”

Another prominent pusher of the Centrist Dad pejorative is Matt Zarb-Cousin, a former Corbyn spokesperson, who is quoted in several articles explaining his definition of the term:

(Centrist Dads are) middle-aged men who cannot come to terms with the world, and politics, changing. They are having the equivalent of a political mid-life crisis, lashing out at primarily young people on the left that, based on the most recent general election, appear better able to understand the concept.”

The term became much more popular after it began receiving media attention. It was first covered by The Guardian[4] on September 23rd, 2017, as part of a piece on new political slang after Kim Jong Un called Donald Trump a dotard. The term became particularly popular on Twitter after the BBC[5] covered it on September 28th. After that, several other news outlets picked up on the term, including Vice,[6] Esquire,[7] and more. Meanwhile, on Twitter, tweets joking about Centrist Dads began growing much more popular after the BBC article appeared. Twitter user @cinemashoebox[8] posted a tweet on the 28th using the term, gaining over 150 retweets (shown below, left). The same day, Zarb-Cousin[9] tweeted about the term too, gaining over 70 retweets and 460 likes.


Various Examples


Search Interest

External References



Share Pin

Related Entries 2 total

Hire More Women Guards
This Is My OWN Conclusion

Recent Images 11 total


Recent Videos 0 total

There are no recent videos.




Load 117 Comments
See more