The Guardian (USA)

The Aftermath review: a younger, more liberal America? OK, Boomer

- Lloyd Green

Younger Americans are decidedly more liberal than their parents. On election day 2022 they thwarted a ballyhooed “red wave”, saved the Georgia senator Raphael Warnock from defeat and deflated Kari Lake’s bid for Arizona governor. Nationally, voters under 30 went Democratic 63-35.

Millennial­s, those born between 1981 and 1996, and members of Generation Z, born between 1997 and 2012, are also less than proud of living in the US, according to survey data. Suffice to say, “Maga” sloganeeri­ng leaves them less than reassured.

Those generation­s grew up in the shadows of 9/11, the Iraq war, the great recession and Covid. Their school lunch menus featured shooter lockdown drills. They are ethnically diverse. Millennial­s have defied political expectatio­ns. They did not shift right with age. Instead, they make Republican­s sweat.

Along with race, gender and culture, inter-generation­al rivalry can be tossed into that long-simmering pile of resentment­s known as America’s cold civil war. Enter Philip Bump and his first book, aptly subtitled The Last Days of the Baby Boom and the Future of Power in America. Bump is a national columnist for the Washington Post. Demographi­cs, culture and economics are part of his remit. Through that prism, The Aftermath delivers.

Bump attempts to explain how the US reached its present inflection point and offers a glimpse of what may come next. His tone is methodical, not alarmist.

Gently, he introduces the reader to the term “pig in the python”, coined by Landon Jones, once managing editor of People magazine, to describe the demographi­c bulge created by GIs who returned from the second world war. Bump pays respect to Jones’s book, Great Expectatio­ns, which stands among the “first serious examinatio­ns of the baby boom”. Hence the label Baby Boomers, for people born in those fertile post-war years.

Boomer politician­s include Bill Clinton, George W Bush, Donald Trump and Newt Gingrich. They may not have made the world a better place but they definitely left their mark. Their appetites frequently eclipsed their judgment. Clinton and Trump were impeached. Both faced lawsuits alleging sexual assault. Gingrich was forced out as House speaker.

“They are a generation­al tyranny,” Bump quotes Jones.

“OK Boomer” is a catchphras­e and retort, not a compliment.

More than three decades ago, Lee Atwater, the manager of George HW Bush’s 1988 presidenti­al campaign, believed the boomer experience provided a more cohesive political glue than income, political tradition or religion.

“This group has dominated American culture in one form or another since it came into being,” he observed.

Stratocast­er in hand, Atwater played with Ronnie Wood of the Rolling Stones at Bush’s inaugurati­on. The new president jammed along on air guitar. Atwater recorded an album with BB King and others. Now, Atwater, Bush, King and Charlie Watts are gone. Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards play on. There’s always time for one more tour, until there isn’t.

Bump also addresses tensions within the Democrats’ diverse, upstairsdo­wnstairs coalition, observing that race and ethnicity are not necessaril­y destiny. Among minority voters without college degrees, the party of FDR and JFK has ceded ground to the GOP. The much-vaunted “coalition of the ascendant” has not lived up to its hype.

Bump notes divides between Black and Latino voters. In the 2020 primaries, Black Democrats sided with Joe Biden, Latinos with Bernie Sanders. Among Latinos, Trump ran three points better against Biden than against Hillary Clinton. Among Black voters, he was five points better.

As with working-class whites, cultural issues retained their salience for those without a degree. Before the supreme court gutted a woman’s right to choose, Republican­s possessed the luxury of watching the Democrats trip over themselves as they grappled with the latest leftwing orthodoxy, turning off wide swaths of the electorate, including Boomers, as they did so.

Now it’s the Republican­s’ turn to squirm. Voters in red Kansas and Kentucky rejected abortion bans. In the midterms, inflation and abortion were the two most important issues. Inflation may be receding but abortion is not going away.

As Bump observes, women older than 60 frequently emerged as both faces of the resistance to Trump and a moderating force. More than three in five Americans are angry or dissatisfi­ed with the supreme court decision on abortion, yet the GOP faithful demands self-immolation.

Affirmativ­e action provides another example of ethnic fluidity. In 1996, California adopted Propositio­n 196 and scrapped race-based preference­s, despite overwhelmi­ng Latino opposition. As Bump describes it, the Latino share of the electorate was smaller than its proportion of the population. If results were weighted to reflect that larger figure, Propositio­n 196 would been defeated.

Priorities of ethnic blocs can change. By 2020, support for affirmativ­e action among California­n Latinos appeared lukewarm at best. At the same time California­ns were sending Biden to the White House they resounding­ly rejected Propositio­n 16, an attempt to undo Propositio­n 196.

By the numbers, backers of Propositio­n 16 spent more than $31m for around 44% support. Opponents of the measure raised a meager $1.6m yet took 56%.

Bump posits that in the future, the US will look more like Florida: older and less white. Florida has moved right in recent years – whether ageing millennial­s and Gen Z-ers push it back towards the center remains, of course, to be seen. Bump also poses a series of “what ifs”, unanswered: “What happens if changes in the state reduce the motivation for Americans or immigrants to move there? What if the federal government further constrains internatio­nal migration?”

“Florida’s future is dependent on decisions made in the present,” he writes. “The long term depends on the short term.”

The Aftermath: The Last Days of the Baby Boom and the Future of Power in America is published in the US by Penguin Random House

 ?? Photograph: Bryan Olin Dozier/NurPhoto/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Protesters gather for the Women's March outside the White House in Washington last month.
Photograph: Bryan Olin Dozier/NurPhoto/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck Protesters gather for the Women's March outside the White House in Washington last month.

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