Not only is the Millennial Generation the most populous, but
according to a new study released by Pew Research Center, they now equal Baby Boomers in the number
of eligible voters. According to the study, Boomers comprise 69.7 percent of
eligible voters while Millennials make up 69.2 percent.
The similarity stops there and hence the challenge. Millennials
are not voting in numbers that gives them political influence. How to change
this was the subject of the original article posted March 30, 2016. You can
read that below.
I am a Baby Boomer. Since I turned 30, I have looked forward to
every new decade of my life, 70 is rapidly approaching. Every year has gotten
better and I relish the idea that this will continue.
Since the 1960’s, Baby Boomers have held the distinction of being
the largest generation. That changed in 2015. The honor now belongs to the
Millennial Generation, those born between 1981 and 1997. This generation is our
future. Boomers and to some extent older Generation Xers need to not only
accept this but embrace it.
While leading the pack as the most populous generation,
Millennials are trailing when it comes to voting. In Nevada, Millennials are 31
percent of the population but make up only 24 percent of registered voters (41
percent of eligible voters are not registered to vote). Since there is a lack
of participation in the process it is not surprising that only 4 percent of
Nevada legislators are Millennials.
Millennials do not embrace political parties to the extent of
Boomers. Nearly 28 percent of Millennials registered to vote are registered as
Non-Partisan. This is nine percent higher than the overall state total. It is
important to note that prior to the presidential caucus the percentage was
close to 30 percent and a clear 10 percent higher than the state.
Millennials are turned off to the political climate. To be
encouraged to participate, they want answers not rhetoric. They want to know
how elected officials and candidates will address issues important to them.
They do not fit the standard party mold or comprise part of the so-called party
base. In a study released by Pew Research in September, 2014, 84 percent hold
positions that are not on the ideological fringe.
Given they are our future, it makes no sense to not take the steps
necessary to get this generation involved, not only as voters but as candidates
and elected officials. Holding on to the politics of the past will not serve
our communities, our state, or our nation well.
One way Nevada legislators can demonstrate their commitment to
engaging the Millennial Generation would be to enact the Nevada Election Modernization and Reform Act of 2017 (NEMRA- 2017) during the 2017 legislative
session. NEMRA – 2017 will engage not only the Millennial Generation but all
voters who feel rejected by the current hyper-partisan political landscape.
NEMRA – 2017 will make our electoral process fully inclusive, welcome all
voters’ participation at all elections, encourage meaningful discussion of the
issues rather than rhetoric and talking points, and demonstrate every vote, not
just those from a small portion of each major political party, truly matters.
We can welcome the future and all the promise it holds or stick
with the past, leaving our political decisions in the hands of an aging small
party base that is not representative of the overall population. The choice is
ours and the 2017 Nevada legislature’s to make.
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