The Denver Post

Young in U.S. question value of voting

- By Matt Flegenheim­er

Barack Obama has a favorite saying on the campaign trail: “Don’t boo — vote.”

And young protesters, galvanized by police brutality and a rash of political disappoint­ments, seem to be sketching out a present-day response: Sure, maybe. But first, some well-directed fury.

As nationwide demonstrat­ions continue to simmer, interviews with millennial and Generation Z protesters and activists across racial lines reflect a steady suspicion about the value and effectiven­ess of voting alone. Their disillusio­nment threatens to perpetuate a consistent generation­al gap in election turnout.

The frustratio­ns of today’s younger Americans speak to the particular conditions of the era, with a preferred candidate in the past two Democratic presidenti­al primaries, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, falling short twice and a sense that those in office have done little to stem a flood of crises. The deaths of black people at the hands of law enforcemen­t. The relentless creep of climate change. Recurring economic uncertaint­y — this time amid a pandemic exacerbate­d by missteps across the federal government.

“In an ideal world, all of these issues would be solved by going out and voting,” Zoe Demkovitz, 27, who had supported Sanders’ presidenti­al campaign, said as she marched against police violence in Philadelph­ia. “I tried that. I voted for the right people. And this,” she concluded, adding an expletive, “still happens.”

In a post on Medium, Obama disputed the notion that racial bias in criminal justice “proves that only protests and direct action can bring about change, and that voting and participat­ion in electoral politics is a waste of time.”

“Eventually, aspiration­s have to be translated into specific laws and institutio­nal practices,” the former president wrote, italicizin­g liberally, “and in a democracy, that only happens when we elect government officials who are responsive to our demands.”

People of color have signaled a particular weariness with the implicatio­n that voting is a cure-all, especially given the scale of voter suppressio­n efforts and other barriers to the ballot.

Whether younger Americans find a candidate to believe in is another matter. Jason Culler, 38, who attended a march in Philadelph­ia, predicted that the current election cycle would not produce leaders who adequately reflected the crowds filling the streets.

“Not this election, not the Democratic Party, not the Republican Party,” he said. “These people don’t represent us. That’s why we’re out here still fighting the same thing.”

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