Why does so much of the political process lack resonance with so many young people? As our poll shows, politics doesn’t seem to address the worries of the youth in any particularly reassuring way. Yet all the classic signs of a disconnect between this class of voters and office-seekers only constitute the big picture.
Outlook’s correspondents fanned across the country and dug deeper, asking young people across a variety of backgrounds, incomes and geographies how they might want to change the world they were in. We found that apathy at aggregate level merely obscures a huge array of concerns that trouble them.
Perhaps trouble is a weak word, because a lot of these young men and women are downright livid; with politicians, with the government, with the system. Their issues range from temples to global respect. And this concern is increasingly manifesting itself in various shades of anger, across the spectrum from cynical disaffection to outright contempt.
Luckily for democracy, not all of them are willing to let go of a basic faith in electoral politics. Not yet.