Miami Herald

Democrats must stop treating young Americans like we’re children. We count — and we vote

- BY ASHLEY LYNN PRIORE Progressiv­e Media Project Ashley Lynn Priore is the founder of Youth Political Strategies. She is based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia. ©2021 Tribune Content Agency

Acouple of months ago, I wrote an op-ed for The Progressiv­e magazine about why President Biden needs to build a bridge with young Americans. It drew hundreds of responses from strangers agreeing with my sentiments.

But I heard nothing from the one place that mattered most: the White House.

So I wrote a “Playbook on Youth Engagement in the White House” and sent it to Biden’s staff. They encouraged me to stay in touch; there was no substantiv­e conversati­on.

Young Americans like me shouldn’t feel like kids in the grocery store putting candy in the cart and having elected officials tell us, “Put that back.” Our bold policy proposals are not overly idealistic, shortsight­ed or naive. They’re necessary. We’re fighting for a sustainabl­e future on an emissions-filled planet, for economic equity and a departure from systemic racism. We are demanding fundamenta­l human rights.

Biden promised us that he would be a president for all. Am I and the rest of the nation’s 42 million young people included?

The Democratic National Committee’s website says: “Democrats will promote the rights of young people and nurture young leaders.”

Where are these young leaders exactly?

In April 2020, the Democratic Party had two primary candidates for president: Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, 79, and former Vice President Joe Biden, 78. Four years earlier, Sanders, then 75, was squared off against an establishm­ent Democrat, Hillary Clinton, then 69.

For two presidenti­al elections in a row, millennial­s and GenZers had to choose contenders who were old enough to be their grandparen­ts. Young people were looking for . . . what’s the term? Oh yes — “new blood.”

It’s true that Sanders is beloved by many young progressiv­es. They thought that a leading Democratic candidate was finally speaking about the issues that matter to them, including student debt, the Green New Deal and higher education. But, in 2020, the nod went to Biden, and young people were told, “Hey, at least he’s not Trump.”

The Democratic National Convention didn’t help. Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich might have swayed moderate Republican­s to come to the Democratic side, but he didn’t excite young people. Why not invite Rep. Sharice Davids, the first Democrat elected to represent a Kansas congressio­nal district in a decade? She was then a mere 40 years old.

Don’t tell me that my president and his staff can’t respond to everyone and that my “want” is just one thing on list of a billion things to do. Asking to implement an Office of Young Americans is not asking too much. Young people are willing to do the work.

And how about creating positions that enhance youth voice and youth power? There are no youth engagement staffers in Biden’s Office of Public Engagement who are under 25, as many groups have urged. Hiring a director of youth engagement and youth liaisons within each department could help build relationsh­ips between young people and their government. The key to connecting with young people is creating safe spaces for conversati­ons about the issues that impact them most.

The House and the Senate can create youth councils within their prospectiv­e offices to establish stronger bonds between young constituen­ts and staffers.

Real youth engagement. That is what young people want. I’m not saying that we cannot have older politician­s. I am saying that we need to do a better job at inclusivit­y, because democracy is for everyone.

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