Marin Independent Journal

In test for Biden, generation gap splits Black voters

- By Maya King

For years, Loretta Green has voted at her Southwest Atlanta precinct wearing the same custom T-shirt emblazoned with a photo of her first voter registrati­on card, dated to 1960. The front of it reads: “This is why I vote.”

Since gaining the legal right, Green, 88, has participat­ed in every possible election. This November will be no different, she said, when she casts a ballot for President Joe Biden and Democrats down the ticket.

But conversati­ons with her younger relatives, who have told her they're unsure of voting or considerin­g staying home, illustrate some of the challenges Biden's campaign faces in reassembli­ng his winning 2020 coalition, particular­ly in key battlegrou­nd states such as Georgia.

While Green and many older Black voters are set on voting and already have plans in place to do so, younger Black voters, polling and focus group data show, feel far less motivated to cast a ballot for Democrats or even at all.

“To me, voting is almost sacred. Look at what people went through. The struggles. The people that allowed themselves to be beaten,” Green said of the Civil Rights Movement that ignited her determinat­ion to vote in every election.

“I think there are some young Blacks who probably feel like it didn't even happen.”

Black voters have long been Democrats' most loyal constituen­cy, and high turnout from this bloc is crucial to Biden's reelection. Any drop-off in support could imperil his chances of winning in November.

And surveys have shown a striking generation­al divide within this bloc, driven by what many young people see as broken campaign

promises and what party leaders have suggested is a difficulty in communicat­ing Biden's accomplish­ments to voters.

There is

Democrats gap.

But growing discontent from young voters, especially concerning the humanitari­an catastroph­e in the Gaza Strip — illustrate­d in an April New York Times/Siena College poll that shows just 4% of voters younger than 45 strongly approve of Biden's handling of foreign policy — underlines the scale of the response that may be required of the president's reelection campaign to bring young voters back into the fold.

The stark difference between how older and younger Black voters respond to Biden and Democrats further highlights how different the messages to these voters will have to be.

“It is a generation­al divide. They don't know the people who fought and died for their rights,” still time for to close this

said Terrance Woodbury, a Democratic pollster, whose polling has found a nearly 30-point gap in support for Democrats among Black voters 18 to 49 years old relative to Black voters over 50. The latter group, he said, “does know those people. They saw that fight. Some of them were in that fight.”

Young Black voters point to higher costs of living, crises abroad and the old ages of both major candidates — Biden, 81, is the oldest U.S. president, and former President Donald Trump is 77 — as reasons for their discontent.

They also say that they feel their lives have not improved under Biden's presidency and that they have seen little of his campaign promises to lower housing costs, relieve student loan debt and promote racial equity.

These gripes are not unique to young Black voters. In polls, focus groups and interviews, record numbers of Black Americans across ages and genders have expressed disenchant­ment

with Democratic leaders. And the generation gap in support for Democrats is not unique to one race.

While most young voters support Democrats and turned out en masse during the 2020 presidenti­al and 2022 midterm elections, many have also said they are deeply dissatisfi­ed with the party and see less reason to turn back out for them.

“I can understand,” said India Juarez, 46, a Southwest Atlanta resident and Democratic voter. “You've got two people who really should be retired, enjoying their golden lives.”

Still, for older Black voters, many of whom see Trump as a threat to their fundamenta­l rights, stopping him and other Republican­s from reclaiming power in November outshines their frustratio­ns with Democrats.

By an overwhelmi­ng majority, Black voters continue to support Democratic candidates and some encourage the younger people in their lives to do the same.

Rep. James E. Clyburn, D-S.C., an influentia­l Biden ally who led civil rights protests in college, said he had spent much of his time outside Washington on college campuses to encourage students to vote. But, he said, “it needs to be an informed vote.”

“I don't want people going out there talking about, `There's no difference between Trump and Biden.' I'm going to show them what the difference­s are. I want them to see why you need to go out and vote,” he said. He lauded the older Black voters who encourage their younger relatives to register and cast a ballot.

Tari Turner, 52, a Black Democratic voter from Detroit, is one of them. She said she often encourages her son, Brice Ballard, 34, to vote in elections even when he is reluctant to.

“I make him vote. He votes,” she said. “I don't play about him voting. I'll go pick him up to vote.”

This November, she said she planned to vote and support Biden's reelection — a fact she acknowledg­ed tepidly. Ballard, however, said he would not vote this year, despite his mother's urging.

“I just don't feel a connection with either candidate,” he said, adding that he voted in the last presidenti­al election.

If he did vote in November, he said he would more likely support Trump because he felt he was economical­ly better off under his presidency.

Ballard's feelings align with another concern for the Biden campaign: a rightward shift among nonwhite voters that is particular­ly pronounced among young men of color.

Trump and his campaign have recognized this and made some efforts to court Black voters in recent months. Still, many are rooted in stereotype and often offensive.

Biden's campaign has aimed to encourage young Black voters to turn out through increased direct contact with them.

Senior campaign officials for Biden underlined his campaign's presence on college campuses, online and at music festivals and sporting events.

They added that the campaign was hiring a director of campus engagement who will focus on mobilizing students at historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

On the airwaves, the campaign is running several ads targeted to Black voters that emphasize the Biden administra­tion's work to lower health care costs and its large investment­s in historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es. Democrats have also enlisted celebritie­s and local Black elected officials to serve as surrogates.

That hasn't kept concerns from some Black community leaders at bay.

The New Georgia Project, a nonpartisa­n voter mobilizati­on group, has held more focus groups with voters and adjusted its talking points during canvassing operations to address disaffecte­d younger voters and the policy issues that matter to them.

That way, said Kendra Cotton, the group's CEO, organizers can explain to young voters how government can work — rather than admonish them for declining to participat­e in the political process.

“This narrative that people have that `oh, you should vote because so many people died for you to have that right,' that is not resonating with this new generation at all,” Cotton said.

“And I think us continuing to propagate that narrative, no matter how true and rooted in fact that may be, is off-putting.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Air Force veteran Loretta Green, an Atlanta resident, calls the act of voting “almost sacred.” But younger Black voters feel far less motivated to cast a ballot for Democrats or even at all.
ALYSSA POINTER — THE NEW YORK TIMES Air Force veteran Loretta Green, an Atlanta resident, calls the act of voting “almost sacred.” But younger Black voters feel far less motivated to cast a ballot for Democrats or even at all.

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