Recently I spoke with a college freshman attending Wesleyan College in Connecticut. He said all most all his class will be voting for Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren (or someone similarly progressive). When I asked if they would consider Joe Biden, he said “No” I don’t think they will even bother to vote. David Brooks points out the problems the GOP has in defining who they are, but I think the Democrats have a problem in defining how progressive to be. Hard to say who’s making progress. Both parties seem intent on shooting themselves in the foot.
“For much of the 20th century, young and old people voted pretty similarly. The defining gaps in our recent politics have been the gender gap (women preferring Democrats) and the education gap. But now the generation gap is back, with a vengeance.
This is most immediately evident in the way Democrats are sorting themselves in their early primary preferences. A Democratic voter’s race, sex or education level doesn’t predict which candidate he or she is leaning toward, but age does.
In one early New Hampshire poll, Joe Biden won 39 percent of the vote of those over 55, but just 22 percent of those under 35, trailing Bernie Sanders. Similarly, in an early Iowa poll, Biden won 41 percent of the oldster vote, but just 17 percent of the young adult vote, placing third, behind Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
As Ronald Brownstein pointed out in The Atlantic, older Democrats prefer a more moderate candidate who they think can win. Younger Democrats prefer a more progressive candidate who they think can bring systemic change.
The generation gap is even more powerful when it comes to Republicans. To put it bluntly, young adults hate them.