The Columbus Dispatch

Scare tactics likely can’t motivate Gen Z

- Your Turn Charlie Sabgir Guest columnist

Democrats are staring down the barrel of a potential electoral bloodbath this November: record inflation, looming recession, and the historic midterm party swing all point to a likely red wave.

In Ohio, where new district maps earn an “F” from the Princeton Gerrymande­ring Project, the party is in danger of winning just two out of 15 House seats, on top of likely gubernator­ial and Senate defeats.

For Democratic candidates to overcome the odds this fall, they must win back an electorate that is losing faith in President Joe Biden with each passing day: Gen Z.

The Biden Administra­tion has earned the right to celebrate bipartisan gun reform; the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill; a record number of federal judges appointed, and more.

However, failure to make significan­t progress on climate change, abortion rights in a post-roe world, and other meaningful issues for Gen Z has disillusio­ned many within this demographi­c and disincenti­vized turnout for the 2022 midterms.

Ohio Democrats must recognize this cynicism and respond by appealing to the hearts and minds of young voters.

A good place to start is highlighti­ng the Republican policies implemente­d at a state level over the past two years.

Since taking office, Gov. Mike Dewine has not only expanded concealed carry privileges, but he has also lowered the amount of training required for teachers to wield firearms to a mere 24 hours.

Gov. Dewine’s policies are indicative of the Republican Party’s growing extremism and Ohio Dems must communicat­e to young voters that should the GOP grab control of both chambers in 2022, this is only the beginning. To drive home this point, Democrats can look no further than their competitio­n this election cycle.

Take J.R. Majewski, the Republican candidate running to unseat Marcy Kaptur for Ohio’s 9th congressio­nal district.

Majewski was not only a participan­t at the Jan. 6 rally and a proponent of “The Big Lie,” but also an advocate for secession after the 2020 election.

Currently, he’s in a toss-up to unseat the longestser­ving woman in Congress. Majewski is not an anomaly; rather, he is an embodiment of today’s GOP.

Birth control restrictio­ns, same-sex marriage bans , and more are on the table should the GOP take control of Congress in 2022, and Ohio Democrats must not sugar-coat the haunting reality of what’s at stake.

Scare tactics won’t be enough to motivate young voters, however.

For Democratic candidates, the larger challenge over the coming months will be balancing this message out with the most valuable emotion in politics: hope.

For the Bernie-supporting college student who’s fed up with the Democratic National Committee, Kaptur must let him or her know that she could be the difference between Republican­s overturnin­g the 2024 presidenti­al election or not, the difference between a national abortion ban or not.

For Tim Ryan, he must let them know that he will be the vote to end the filibuster and codify Roe, the “yes” needed to swear in the next Supreme Court justice; for Nan Whaley, that she will be the difference between teachers possessing a pistol in the classroom or not.

Ohio Democrats have both a duty and an opportunit­y to reignite the emotion that drove a record number of young voters to the polls in 2020, which means letting voters know not only the consequenc­es of a Republican-controlled Congress, but the tangible impacts that winning their races will have.

These candidates must prove to a sour-eyed Gen Z which party has their interests in mind and which party seeks to move the country backward.

Charlie Sabgir is a rising third-year student at Georgetown University in its School of Foreign Service and was raised in New Albany, Ohio.

Ohio Democrats have both a duty and an opportunit­y to reignite the emotion that drove a record number of young voters to the polls in 2020, which means letting voters know not only the consequenc­es of a Republican-controlled Congress ... .

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