The right thrives on bullying ‘snowflakes’. But who will vote for it when they grow old? | Owen Jones
Young people deprived of prosperity may represent the first generation that doesn't grow more conservative with age
Spite. When you dig down to the essence of modern rightwing politics, you're left with little else. This wasn't always the case. Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan offered clear, coherent visions of society, even if their worship of free markets delivered economic insecurity and stagnating living standards. While today's Tories and Trumpified Republicans remain committed to defending privileged interests, their driving ambition now seems to be deliberately provoking fury among the progressively minded, much to the delight of their supporters. It's this tendency that led Donald Trump to denounce Mexicans as criminals and attempt to ban Muslims from entering the US; it's the same tendency that drove the home secretary, Suella Braverman, to declare that her dream" and obsession" was to see a flight transporting asylum seekers to Rwanda. Cruelty is precisely the point.
But this spite has found a particular target in younger British and American people, many of whom increasingly embrace progressive social values such as anti-racism and LGBTQ+ rights (granted, this relies on a generous definition of youth as millennials - while the oldest members of Generation Z are only in their mid-20s, the most senior millennials have now reached their early 40s). These generations have become a common enemy for the right. The feeling is mutual. According to new research and survey data, millennials are defying a supposed iron law of politics, that we shift to the right as we age. No other generation in recorded political history has retained such an entrenched rejection of rightwing politics as they've grown older.
Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist
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