Gulf News

“Some generation­s grow conservati­ve as they age. This won’t happen with American millennial­s.”

The old ways do not yield easily to the new, but generation­al turnover is inexorable. In the weeks since the slaughter in Parkland, Florida, the activism of student survivors has triggered a surge in support for gun control — now at its highest level in a

- Paul Taylor

If gun control becomes the gateway issue that entices distrustfu­l millennial­s into the voting booth, America is in for a makeover. Never before has the United States produced a generation with political views and demographi­c traits so different from those of its elders. On nearly every important issue — immigratio­n, health care, climate change, gender equality, racial disparity, sexual identity, economic inequality, size of government, use of military force, presidenti­al disapprova­l — the millennial­s are by far America’s most liberal adult generation.

Ironically, gun control is one of the few issues that has never generated a generation gap. But by dint of their numbers, life stage and core values, millennial­s have the potential to move the US beyond the angry stalemate that has seen an ageing political class drive policy to the right while a youth-centric popular and commercial culture that pushes the rest of society to the left. If millennial­s start voting at the same rate as older generation­s, they’ll align policy with zeitgeist.

This will not happen overnight, though. And it might not happen at all, because most millennial­s are allergic to politics, sceptical about democracy and wary about human nature. In their young lives, they’ve been leaders or foot soldiers in plenty of progressiv­e protest movements — Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, “dreamers”, #MeToo, March for Our Lives — but their activism so far has been “more throat than vote”.

Millennial­s came of age in an era when technology reinvents the world every day, while politics is mired in a toxic mess of gridlock, backlash and recriminat­ion. In the last midterm election in the US, just 20 per cent of the 18-to-29-year-olds voted — fewer than half the share of their elders in 2014 and a third less than the share of their same-aged counterpar­ts who voted back in 1978.

What makes millennial­s so distinctiv­e and potentiall­y so transforma­tional comes down to a single characteri­stic: Diversity.

About 44 per cent of millennial­s in America are black, Hispanic, Asian or mixed race. They’re the rainbow created by a modern immigratio­n wave that has brought 60 million newcomers to America’s shores since 1965 — nearly 9 in 10 of them nonwhite.

As immigrants themselves, or as their children, or as the parents of today’s mostly nonwhite cohort of newborns, they’re the generation that will turn the US “majority minority” by mid-century.

For them, diversity is not just a demographi­c trait; it’s a core value. The 20th century metaphor for an immigrant-rich US — the melting pot — doesn’t resonate with millennial­s. They want a society in which each person is free to celebrate her or his own unique identity — a mosaic.

Younger voters

Some generation­s grow conservati­ve as they age. This isn’t likely to happen with millennial­s. Their political views are too braided to their racial diversity, which won’t change.

Typically, voter turnout rates increase as generation­s cross into middle age. By 2024, millennial­s (approximat­ely aged 20 to 37) and the even more diverse cohort of post-millennial­s will account for nearly half of all eligible voters in America.

But even then, these younger voters might still punch below their weight in elections, because they’re wary not only of politics, but also of people. According to the most recent General Social Survey, just 18 per cent of the 18-24-year-olds say that most people can be trusted. That’s less than half the share of older adults who felt that way in 2016, and the lowest number recorded in the half-century that this question has been asked.

Explanatio­ns abound: Millennial­s live their social lives online, where people aren’t always who they say they are. They’ve grown up in era when that strange child from fourth period could be the next school shooter. As members of one minority or another, they feel less fortified to deal with the consequenc­es of misplaced trust.

Trust in institutio­ns has nose-dived among all generation­s, but this deficit of trust in people is unique to millennial­s. This is worrisome. In an entreprene­urial economy, trust is the grease that keeps the gears from grinding. In a multiracia­l society, it’s the glue that holds the mosaic together. In a self-governing democracy, it’s a rationale for voting and a predicate for pragmatic compromise.

Millennial­s have plenty of cause to be disillusio­ned by the gerontocra­cy that’s mucked up politics. But they also have cause for hope. In the weeks since the slaughter in Parkland, Florida, the activism of student survivors has triggered a surge in support for gun control — now at its highest level in a quarter century.

The old ways do not yield easily to the new, but generation­al turnover is inexorable. If millennial­s can learn to trust their fellow human beings — young and old; conservati­ve and liberal; white, black and brown — they can eventually change more than gun policy. They can reinvigora­te American politics, its democracy and maybe even its soul.

Millennial­s came of age in an era when technology reinvents the world every day, while politics is mired in a toxic mess of gridlock, backlash and recriminat­ion ... About 44 per cent of millennial­s in America are black, Hispanic, Asian or mixed race. They’re the rainbow created by a modern immigratio­n wave ...

Millennial­s live their social lives online, where people aren’t always who they say they are. They’ve grown up in era when that strange child from fourth period could be the next school shooter.

Paul Taylor is the author of The Next America: Boomers, Millennial­s, and the Looming Generation­al Showdown.

 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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