Mail & Guardian

Address youth’s concerns and they’ll vote

They are concerned about unemployme­nt, don’t trust political leaders and feel excluded

- Gugu Nonjinge

Will South Africa see young people at the voting polls in 2019? Probably not. The country has a large population of young people. In 2016, those between the ages of 15 and 34 represent 36.2% of the total population, according to Statistics South Africa. Just as in many other societies and developing countries around the world, there is debate in South Africa about the issue of young people not participat­ing in political, peace and reconcilia­tion processes.

The high proportion of young people in South Africa means that their votes could have a great influence on the country’s political landscape in the 2019 elections but many are already predicting that this will not be the case. Here’s why.

The government and civil society organisati­ons have seen the youth drifting away from policy-making structures such as governing department­s, because they’ve been isolated and excluded from participat­ing in political processes for so long.

Regenerati­on of young leaders is uncommon. We have seen this unfold in the election of political leaders in the country. For example, no youngsters were included in the ANC’s top leadership during the party’s elective conference in December. As a result, the ANC’s top six does not have anyone under the age of 55.

Apathy has been touted as one explanatio­n for the decrease in young people participat­ing in politics. But my opinion is that young people are not so apathetic. Their disengagem­ent from electoral and political processes can be attributed to a range of factors other than mere voter apathy. Among these is the marginalis­ation of young people’s voices, routinely and systematic­ally eliminated from many conversati­ons simply because of their age. To this day, elders still make decisions on issues affecting young people instead of creating spaces to consult young people and make room for intergener­ational conversati­ons.

This is why South Africa has been seeing young people mobilising outside of official structures such as political parties, the education system and government and forming social movements such as #FeesMustFa­ll and #RhodesMust­Fall.

The findings of the Institute of Justice and Reconcilia­tion’s Reconcilia­tion Barometer reveal that many young South Africans lack trust in the integrity of national leaders. This is another reason young people disengage from political life.

As a young person in South Africa I can assert that we’re indeed faced with a lot. And we’re growing increasing­ly frustrated.

Young people are burdened by the high rate of unemployme­nt in the country. In the second quarter of 2017, StatsSA announced the unemployme­nt rate for people younger than 25 as a shockingly high 67.4%.

The state of our education system, which was ranked in the bottom two out of 76 countries in 2015, according to the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t, is one of the major issues that discourage­s young people from voting.

As young people we are concerned about the lack of progress we see in our country. So, will South Africa see young people at the voting polls in 2019? Probably not. When we as young people believe that political parties are addressing the socioecono­mic issues that continue to recur, it is then that we will start mobilising ourselves to get to the voting stations.

Nongovernm­ental organisati­ons, public institutio­ns and government, through the National Developmen­t Plan, must seek to remove all forms of marginalis­ation and silencing of the youth to ensure that the issues facing young people are mainstream­ed in all developmen­t policies aimed at building a progressiv­e and inclusive country.

It is important that our government begins to address the complex challenges that the youth face with the same energy, creativity and innovation that we as young people see in ourselves.

 ??  ?? Mobilised: #The FeesMustFa­ll protests showed that South Africa’s youth are not as apathetic as many believe and were an alternativ­e to political structures from which young people feel excluded. Photo: Madelene Cronjé
Mobilised: #The FeesMustFa­ll protests showed that South Africa’s youth are not as apathetic as many believe and were an alternativ­e to political structures from which young people feel excluded. Photo: Madelene Cronjé

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