Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

GOP can win young voters by turning the tide on one key issue

- Ian Lares-Chacin of Hialeah is the chairman of the statewide Florida Federation of College Republican­s.

Young voters are an essential ingredient for winning elections. In the 2022 midterm elections, they had record turnout and a 2-to-1 advantage for Democrats. They tipped the scales toward Democrats and blunted the much-expected “red wave.”

Looking to 2024, Republican­s have an emerging opportunit­y to win the youth vote. There are growing signs that young people are discontent with Democrats. In what’s likely to be a close election, this presents a clear opening for Republican­s to address issues that young voters care about and earn their vote.

As chair of the Florida Federation of College Republican­s, I see no clearer shot than on the topics of climate and the environmen­t. These are issues that the GOP stands virtually only to gain on, winning votes without losing any. In the year ahead, the GOP ought to switch course and advance solutions inspired by our own conservati­ve playbook.

In my own experience around the state, I have witnessed countless times how young people won’t even consider GOP candidates due to the perceived mainstream party position on this issue. Not only are young voters, including Republican­s, much more likely to prioritize climate, but majorities of independen­t, moderate or even left-leaning voters would actually consider voting for a Republican if the candidate moved up the topic among their priorities. Further, in a new report from Tufts University about the 2024 election, the issue most linked to a young voter’s self-reported likelihood to vote is the climate challenge.

Without a clear stance on these issues, especially as environmen­tal challenges worsen, the GOP risks losing a generation of voters. And in leading on these topics, they have next to no voters who will flip on them. This offers a rare opportunit­y in politics — an open shot on goal.

Republican­s can offer an alternativ­e to the big government approach that now characteri­zes this issue. The opposing party has successful­ly been advancing a sprawling agenda of federal mandates and spending, to the tune of billions of dollars. With GOP leadership, we could preempt the need for more costly, heavy-handed measures.

To turn the tide, we need fresh vision and leadership, and Florida Republican­s are some of the best positioned to make this reality. There’s growing climate leadership among elected officials across the state, offering a blueprint that the GOP here — and nationwide — should build upon.

To name a few: Under the leadership of Gov. Ron DeSantis and South Florida lawmakers Rep. Danny Perez and Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez, Republican­s recently delivered historic investment­s for Everglades restoratio­n and protection of our water resources. Our members of Congress, including Maria Salazar, Carlos Gimenez and Byron Donalds, have worked to enhance energy independen­ce with clean solutions like nextgen nuclear. And our mayors too, notably Coral Gables’ Vince Lago and Miami’s Francis Suarez, have played a vital role in coastal resilience and infrastruc­ture investment.

What would most strengthen the GOP on these topics is advancing a bold conservati­ve solution for the core climate challenge. It ought to be wrought with conservati­ves’ core principles, harnessing the power of free markets and U.S. innovation, and putting America first.

One such solution is the BakerShult­z plan, which was fashioned by esteemed Republican statesmen James Baker and George Shultz. It would cut regulation­s, unlock the innovative potential of the American economy with market signals and hold other nations accountabl­e for their pollution. This would deliver much more environmen­tal impact through private markets, a far cry from the government control measures currently being advanced.

Crucially, the plan’s internatio­nal component would directly address foreign pollution. With a foreign pollution fee, which is gaining momentum in the U.S. Senate, the U.S. could push foreign producers to meet the same environmen­tal standards as U.S. industry, which research shows is far cleaner, more carbon-efficient than China’s, Russia’s and other foreign polluters’. This approach would stop foreign nations from flooding our markets with cheap goods produced under lax standards, and boost “Made in America” production.

The Republican Party has a rare window. It ought to champion the conservati­ve solutions that will safeguard our environmen­t and economy, and in so doing deliver electoral wins up and down the ballot.

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By Ian LaresChaci­n

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