Mail & Guardian

Gen Z faces ‘happiness v reality’

Most of the youth interviewe­d have little faith that politics will change in their day-to-day lives

- Umamah Bakharia

Anew report has found that Gen Z finds it hard to connect with activism and political spaces. Flux Trends, in partnershi­p with youth agency Student Village, surveyed 30 young people and asked them 30 questions to mark 30 years of democracy.

The report delved into the mindsets driving Gen Zs’ attitude about the future of democracy and their place in it as citizens, consumers, workers and individual­s.

The report found that the majority of young people either refused to register to vote because they believed it did not make a difference or were contemplat­ing which political party to vote for.

“There is no political party at the moment that is attractive to this demographi­c and most of the young people have little faith that politics will make any drastic change in their day-to-day actions,” said researcher Bronwyn Williams.

During visits to universiti­es in Johannesbu­rg, most young people told the Mail & Guardian that they felt the majority of the political parties were not prioritisi­ng the interests of the youth.

“Most young people follow aesthetics and trends when it comes to making decisions, but those that do go and do their research, like me, find that most of these political parties are making it less about us and more about their vengeance or winning streak and that is very problemati­c,” said Nolwazi Mahlangu, a 23-year-old master’s student at the University of the Witwatersr­and.

The Flux Trends survey warns that because young people are undecided about their voting choices, they could fall into the pattern of voting for parties that they associate with generation­al democracy.

“This generation has a strong activism presence and they can be catalysts for change but now we see them following routine by following the same political parties — this shows our society is broken,” Williams said.

It has been 30 years since South

Africa held its first democratic election and although the youth led the movement for a free and equal society, the report found that Gen Z faces the “happiness v reality equation”.

“The expectatio­ns 30 years ago were higher; they needed to make changes. However, the youth of today seem more cynical and their expectatio­ns are lower, which makes it easier to meet, and they seem content with what they receive,” Williams said.

Gen Z activism group So We Vote has attributed the change in youth perception­s of the elections to the quality of leadership.

“There was no complexity in that [first democratic] election because the choice was that clear, and also the quality of leadership available then gave people a sense that South Africa’s best days lay ahead. Today, there is no obvious choice that is inherently evil because the situation we live in is so complex that you don’t know who you trust,” said So We Vote director Otsile Nkadimeng.

Williams cautioned that South Africa could face a similar problem to China, should the youth not become active citizens.

China faced an economic decline after the government introduced the one-child policy — even though it was scrapped in 2016 and replaced with a three-child limit.

A 19-year-old student from the University of Johannesbu­rg said they don’t believe South Africa will face such an issue because “with us, it is not about numbers but more about voter knowledge”.

According to Statistics South Africa, people aged 18 to 34 constitute 35%, or 20.9 million, of the population. But, based on statistics from the Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC), only 11.7 million voters in this cohort are on the voters’ roll.

“The introducti­on of the online self-service voter registrati­on modality has contribute­d to the increased rate of registrati­on by younger voters in the country, as well as by citizens who are residents outside of the Republic,” the IEC’S chief electoral officer, Sy Mamabolo, said at a media briefing in Pretoria in March.

This comes after the IEC held its second mass voter registrati­on in February and opened 23 296 voting stations nationwide to increase voter turnout. The first voter registrati­on weekend was in November 2023. The IEC recorded 27.79 million voters — the highest since 1994.

 ?? Photo: Klaus Vedfelt ?? Disillusio­ned: People aged 18 to 34 number 20.9 million but only 11.7 million are on the voters’ roll.
Photo: Klaus Vedfelt Disillusio­ned: People aged 18 to 34 number 20.9 million but only 11.7 million are on the voters’ roll.

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