Stabroek News Sunday

Peter Ramsaroop sees youth voters as key in 2020

-says 170,000 will be first or second time electors

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Economist and politician Peter Ramsaroop says that based the age distributi­on of Guyana’s population, young voters will be key for the 2020 general elections.

Evaluating the 2012 Census Data (released in July 2016 by the Bureau of Statistics) and extrapolat­ing the numbers out to 2020, he told Sunday Stabroek that the figures reflect a radically changing voting population than in past elections.

“The 2012 census data shows that if you push those bands up by 8 years, which is where Guyana will be in 2020, the first time and second time voters will be almost 170,000 persons,” he said.

This, Ramsaroop believes, will force a different thinking on the selection of the candidates for the contesting parties as compared to the past.

“This generation would normally have a positive view of the nation’s diversity and believes that dreams are more attainable, but not that they are entitled to it. They want to hear the “We” more instead of the “me.” These individual­s tend to get more upset at hearing about the past, they want more to hear about how they can get involved in the future,” Ramsaroop said based on his research.

Ramsaroop is an advisor to Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo and has been associated with both the PNCR and the PPP/C. In the last electoral cycle, he pledged support for the PPP/C

He said the younger voters will be more politicall­y independen­t.

“This generation can also be referred to as the iGeneratio­n, as they literally grew up with technology and social media in their hands. They are poised to dramatical­ly change the cultural, economic and political landscape for some time to come. Studies show that they are distrustfu­l of government because they’ve seen good people, such as their parents who did all the right things, laid off from longstandi­ng jobs and careers as in the case of the sugar workers, and in other areas such as large pay increases for politician­s and more taxes on the ordinary citizens, while they have to listen to their parents complain about a bad economy and lack of disposable income. They are cautious with finances, always looking for the best deals and the best value,” he said.

This group will not be easy to win over, Ramsaroop said, contending that it has a mind of its own. He notes that the youth movement is what helped the present APNU+AFC coalition to come to the seat of government.

The data he referenced also depicts that persons below the age of 37 will be 284,000 persons in 2020. That is almost 80,000 more votes than either party got in 2015, when the PPP/C secured 202,000 votes and APNU+AFC 207,000 votes.

Ramsaroop’s perspectiv­e comes amid campaigns in the country’s two largest parties for key positions. Next month, PNCR candidates Basil Williams, Volda Lawrence and Joseph Harmon will contest the position of chairmansh­ip of the PNCR— the main constituen­t of APNU—and it is unclear which of them has tapped the younger demographi­c.

With Local Government Elections scheduled to be held on November 12th this year, the PPP is to choose its presidenti­al candidate before these polls. The party’s planning has been upturned by the Caribbean Court of Justice decision upholding the country’s presidenti­al term limit. While former President Bharrat Jagdeo had been expected to be the choice, the party now has to confront internal divisions and make a selection from a group that includes former Attorney General Anil Nandlall, former Commerce and Housing Minister Irfaan Ali and former Sport and Culture Minister Dr Frank Anthony. A considerat­ion in making the choice would be who could better reach the younger cohort. A public declaratio­n by PPP member Charles Ramson Jr that he is also interested in becoming the presidenti­al candidate has also focused discussion on the impact that young PPP members can have on the selection process, which is usually confined to the members of the party’s Central Committee.

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