Los Angeles Times

Vote for Johnson, elect Trump

Tom Steyer could use his fortune to convince millennial­s that Clinton is the best candidate.

- By Harold Meyerson Harold Meyerson is executive editor of the American Prospect. He is a contributi­ng writer to Opinion.

Hillary Clinton’s in trouble with the young. It’s not that they’re flocking to Donald Trump, who trails her in every poll of millennial voters. Instead, she’s losing their allegiance to Libertaria­n Party nominee Gary Johnson.

The oddity — and potentiall­y, the tragedy — of all this is that many young Americans’ defining beliefs are dismissed or opposed by libertaria­ns generally and Johnson in particular. But then, Johnson’s appeal is less a testament to the popularity or credibilit­y of his program than to the fact that he’s become the none-of-the-above option for disgruntle­d citizens.

The recent Battlegrou­nd Poll of swing states makes clear the extent of Clinton’s woes. When compared only to Trump, Clinton performed well among millennial­s: 68% trusted her more than him to defend the middle class, 64% to handle foreign policy, and 61% to manage the economy. But in a four-way contest with Trump, Johnson and Green Party nominee Jill Stein, she commanded just 46% support, with 26% for Trump, 18% for Johnson and 5% for Stein. In every poll that has broken down its respondent­s by age, Johnson’s level of support among the young is several times higher than among their elders.

Because Clinton appears to lose more votes to Johnson than Trump does, those who opt for the pox-on-both-your-houses candidate could well put the Republican in the White House.

Clinton has responded to her millennial deficit by talking to audiences of college students about Trump’s racism and xenophobia, and by sending Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren to campaign for her in swing states. She needs to do more: affirming and reaffirmin­g her support for free public college tuition for poor and middleclas­s students, for raising the minimum wage, for clean energy and tighter environmen­tal regulation­s to arrest climate change. But that won’t suffice, either.

To date, the case that Clinton and her advocates are making to the young stresses the vast difference­s in policy and temperamen­t that separate her from her Republican opponent, and that voting for Johnson only helps Trump. It’s understand­able that her campaign hasn’t gone after Johnson — that would only raise his profile and give him more credibilit­y. But there’s much he’s proposing that would be anathema to millennial­s if they only knew about it. Somebody needs to call that to their attention.

To be sure, Johnson supports the legalizati­on of marijuana — way cool. Less cool is his position on climate change. Although he acknowledg­es that it is both real and at least partly man-made, he believes government should take no action against it, leaving the solution, in the classic libertaria­n manner, to the market and the private sector. As if it weren’t the private sector, in response to the market’s incentives, which created global warming in the first place.

Then there’s Johnson’s position on what government can do to make college more affordable and enable students to matriculat­e without piling up mountains of debt. Or, more accurately, the absence of a position. He doesn’t have one, since the very idea of such government interferen­ce runs counter to the libertaria­n creed.

Or consider Johnson’s tax plan, which calls for eliminatin­g the income tax and substituti­ng a national sales tax — a massive shift of the tax burden away from the wealthy to the 90%, a group that includes the overwhelmi­ng majority of 20-somethings.

While Clinton campaigns against Trump, who will wage the campaign to win back her potential supporters who have strayed to Johnson?

There is, in fact, already a large-scale independen­t campaign on her behalf that targets young people in eight swing states, and it is funded by Tom Steyer, the California billionair­e, mega-donor to environmen­tal and other progressiv­e causes, and possible candidate for governor in 2018. In partnershi­p with the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union and other labor groups, Steyer is funding nearly 40% of a $55-million campaign to win young people’s votes for Clinton — focusing, as he recently told MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell, on issues of “economic justice, environmen­tal justice [and] racial justice.”

That’s a focus that allows for plenty of positive contrasts between Clinton and Trump. Not to mention Clinton and Johnson.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States