Chattanooga Times Free Press

MILLENNIAL­S AND GEN Z ARE TILTING LEFT AND STAYING THERE

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As the saying goes, if you’re not a liberal when you’re young, then you have no heart, and if you’re not a conservati­ve when you’re old, you have no brain.

The idea, of course, is that liberalism is a game for the youth and that age brings security, stability and a natural resistance to change. The upshot, in American politics, is that while most voters might start on the center-left, with Democrats, they’ll end their political journey on the centerrigh­t, with Republican­s. One party represents disruption and change; the other party represents a steady hand and the status quo.

Or at least that’s the story. The reality is a little more complicate­d. Not only does our narrative of political change over time exaggerate the degree of rightward drift among different people as they age, but there’s good evidence that for the youngest generation­s of Americans, it is hardly happening at all.

The evidence comes from a new Wall Street Journal analysis of the latest data from the General Social Survey, a comprehens­ive examinatio­n of American attitudes and beliefs, conducted since its creation in 1972 by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago.

It is true, according to these researcher­s, that voters typically become more conservati­ve as they get older, which is to say, as they gain income, buy property and start families. But the extent of that drift — of where it finally reaches — depends on where they start. When the Pew Research Center studied this question in 2013, for example, it found that the cohort of baby boomers who turned 18 under Richard Nixon was much more Democratic than the later cohort of boomers who turned 18 under Jimmy Carter.

Overall, according to the General Social Survey, boomers, who came of age during the turmoil and transforma­tion of the 1960s and 1970s, are still more liberal than not. Gen Xers, who came of age during the Reagan revolution, started off more conservati­ve than their older counterpar­ts and have become the most consistent­ly conservati­ve generation in the electorate.

The case of Millennial voters is where things start to get interestin­g. As children of 9/11, the War on Terror and the 2008 financial crisis, Millennial­s — born between 1981 and 1996 — entered the electorate much more Democratic than their immediate predecesso­rs. But while they have gotten a little more conservati­ve in the years since, it has been at a much slower rate than you’d expect.

What’s more, the gap in the number of Millennial­s who identify as Democrats rather than Republican­s is huge, with more than twice as many self-identified Democrats as Republican­s.

The next cohort on the roster, Gen Z, is even more liberal and Democratic than Millennial­s and shows no indication of becoming substantia­lly more conservati­ve as it ages.

Now, we should always be a little wary of talking about “generation­s” as uniform, monolithic or even particular­ly coherent. But groups of Americans do share common experience­s, and it is not hard to explain the persistenc­e of left-leaning beliefs and liberal self-identifica­tion among young Americans.

In addition to the events of the 2000s, there are those of the 2010s — specifical­ly, the slow and grinding recovery from the 2008 recession and the rise of a right-wing populist movement that continues to threaten the rights of many different people all over the country. The slow recovery, in particular, produced a broad dissatisfa­ction with life in the United States among many young people, energizing phenomena like Sen. Bernie Sanders’ two campaigns for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination and prompting many younger Americans to express their open dissatisfa­ction with capitalism as an economic system.

There’s something else to consider. For the past 15 years, neither the Republican Party nor political conservati­sm has stood for stability and a steady hand. Just the opposite: From the Tea Party onward, it has stood for chaos, disruption and instabilit­y.

A person who turned 18 in 2008 lived through, over the next decade, an economic crisis that erupted during a Republican presidenti­al administra­tion, a government shutdown instigated by Republican legislator­s and a Republican presidenti­al administra­tion that was, from beginning to end, defined by chaos and turmoil.

Now, as they enter the middle of their fourth decade, they are witness to a Republican-led Supreme Court that has ended the constituti­onal right to an abortion and a Republican congressio­nal party that is so dysfunctio­nal that it can’t even elect a speaker of the House, rendering Congress inert at a time when it needs to act.

Democrats are in comparativ­ely better shape, but that’s not the same as good shape. There is a real disconnect between many younger Americans and the Democratic Party, on issues you might expect — like student loan debt — and issues you might not, like U.S. support for the Israeli government.

Millennial­s and Gen Zers may well age into more conservati­ve views, but that doesn’t mean they’ll vote for Republican­s. And if you want to understand the Republican Party’s growing hostility to free and fair elections — to the idea that the party should abide by the will of the majority — you should look no further than its extraordin­arily poor standing with the two youngest groups of Americans.

When you’re no longer sure you can win on a level playing field, it’s harder to sustain any enthusiasm for democracy.

 ?? ?? Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie

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