The Simpsons Season 31 features noticeable progressive ideological elements across multiple episodes, including Lisa's activism against privatized detention and educational algorithms that sort students into socioeconomic castes based on projected futures, animal liberation in 'Gorillas on the Mast,' positive portrayals of LGBTQ+ characters like Paula the lesbian lumberjill and Patty's girlfriend Evelyn, and a plot exploring cannabis legalization's community impacts. The season aired amid the Hank Azaria Apu controversy, with his January 2020 announcement to step away from voicing the Indian character due to cultural sensitivity pressures, foreshadowing the show's post-season pivot to race-matched casting for non-white roles. These elements influence character arcs and plots—such as church modernization challenging traditional faith and critiques of screen addiction and wealth inequality—but remain satirical rather than overtly lecturing, without dominating the core family comedy. Creator intent shows no explicit activism push for this season, and reception was mixed with no major backlash labeling it 'woke,' though it reflects the broader trend of increasing social justice integration in later seasons.