We’re old, we’re progressive and we vote in big numbers



The GOP has been flailing a bit in latest weeks, as an election as soon as anticipated to be a typical midterm blowout has tightened significantly. If the GOP expects that older voters will bail them out as in elections previous, our recommendation is, assume once more.

The folks knowledge, after all, is that older voters are extra conservative — an concept with at the least some statistical help. There may be a whole media ecosystem geared to rattling the fears of us older folks. At Fox Information, the place the median viewer age is usually put at 68, there’s all the time some new scary fable (migrant invasions, antifa rioters). And there’s additionally the widespread sense that the previous hearken again to some extra homogenized previous — as one commentator hewing to the stereotype put it lately, “The individuals who traditionally prove (to vote) are older white of us who lengthy for the great ol’ days when a person may help his household, and people uppity (insert invective right here) knew their place.”

However these assumptions don’t survive a brush with the info, at the least not on this election cycle. It’s true that older voters backed Donald Trump in 2016, however that help started to wane significantly in 2020; earlier this 12 months some pollsters began noticing a pronounced shift. And if you happen to have a look at the cross tabs of latest surveys, you discover some fascinating outcomes.

Have a look at, say, the Senate race in Wisconsin, the place 67-year-old white man Ron Johnson is taking over 35-year-old not-white-guy Mandela Barnes. In a September Marquette College survey, Johnson will get his highest unfavorable scores from possible voters over 60; Barnes finds his greatest supporters in that very same group, and by a big margin in contrast with youthful voters.

Or check out Arizona — loads of previous folks there, and one other sizzling Senate race between Trumpish Blake Masters and liberal Mark Kelly. In an August Fox Information ballot, seniors give Kelly his largest margin of any cohort, 51-38 — in contrast with, say, 46-39 for these beneath age 45. The most recent polls, fortunately, present youthful folks emulating their elders.

Outcomes like this don’t shock us. We expect, actually, we’ve got a fairly good concept of what’s occurring.

A few of it’s enlightened self-interest. The GOP has been making alarming threats about Social Safety and Medicare. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who would possible lead the price range committee in a Republican Senate, has referred to as for “entitlement reform”; Rick Scott, the chair of the Nationwide Republican Senatorial Committee, has talked about “sunsetting” all federal laws and particularly desires to “assessment” and “repair” Social Safety, which was created by laws. Wisconsin’s Johnson thinks Social Safety and Medicare shouldn’t be robotically funded however voted on yearly.

Our listening to will not be fairly nearly as good because it as soon as was, however canine whistles nonetheless resonate; the typical Medicare recipient has an earnings of $30,000 a 12 months, so we previous of us concentrate.

However there’s additionally one thing deeper at work right here. Older folks as we speak principally aren’t wanting again to some bucolic, Hallmark card existence as their touchstone. If you’re in your 60s or 70s or early 80s now, a few of your youth was spent within the epic maelstrom that was the Nineteen Sixties, a time of immense cultural change. The individuals who didn’t belief anybody over 30 at the moment are at the least twice that age themselves, and their youth embody supporting exactly the issues that as we speak’s GOP is concentrating on.

Think about: Lots of the legal guidelines that the Supreme Courtroom is weakening, blocking or overturning had been the product of our cohort: the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (which adopted the epic registration drives led by younger activists within the South), the Gun Management Act of 1968 (which adopted the generation-shaking assassinations of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.), the Clear Air Act of 1971 (after younger folks organized the primary Earth Day) and Roe v. Wade in 1973. These of us previous 60 spent a part of our lives with guardrails in place so most People may vote, with some sorts of restrictions on assault weapons, with a federal authorities making an attempt to wash up air pollution and with girls exercising management over their our bodies. If we had been going to be conservative, that is what we’d be conserving!

The slogan of our group, Third Act, displays that activism: “We gained these fights as soon as, we are able to win them once more.” However, actually, older People will not be caught up to now — we’re additionally desirous to tackle the challenges which have arisen in our lifetimes, local weather change chief amongst them.

We acknowledge we’re chargeable for a lot of the harm and we all know that our kids and grandchildren must stay with the outcomes, so whereas we’re nonetheless right here we’re making an attempt to do what we now can to show issues round. (Amongst different issues, we are able to pledge to chop up our bank cards from the 4 greatest American banks, who’re additionally the 4 greatest lenders to the fossil gasoline business.) Our age group desires what we’ve all the time wished: a caring and free society.

And we’ll make our energy recognized on election day too. One piece of standard knowledge about older People could be very true: We imagine in voting. There’s no approach to maintain us away from the polls. Which ought to fear the Republicans a bit, as a result of we’re not your grandparents’ grandparents.

Heather Sales space is board chair of Third Act, mobilizing progressive older People. She ran the Biden marketing campaign’s outreach to senior voters in 2020. Environmentalist Invoice McKibben is the founding father of Third Act and writer, most lately, of “The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon.” ©2022 Los Angeles Occasions. Distributed by Tribune Content material Company.