In my limited knowledge what I understand is this, the higher the DTE, higher is the chance of underlying moving. Hence, MMs pricing in higher IV in longer DTE options.
If MMs had the kind of control over the market that this implies, we could all make a fortune doing that instead of trading.

The market - i.e., traders - determines the prices at which a given instrument will trade. If the "majority opinion" is that a 30-day 100 call in a $100 stock is worth $5 and someone offers it for $4, that trade will be gone instantly. If someone else bids $6 for it, ditto. If there's enough liquidity - i.e., buyers and sellers - this will continue until the B/A spread around the "fair" price is down to 0.01, and the only outstanding bids[offers] are too high[low] for anyone to be interested in them.
That combo of "fair" price, tenor, and strike has an IV associated with it - about 44% for the above - and it's not something that market makers "priced in".