Generation Gaps and Obama

By Alan Stewart Carl | Related entries in Barack, Liberalism, News

In a post discussing her own reservations about Barack Obama, Amba tangentially discusses the disconnect between herself and her more liberal friends and family.

The dyed-in-the-wool Democrats I know, many of them in my own family and among my closest friends, are very solemn about being in (as opposed to on) the right. To them, the simple virtue of being simply pro-choice , antiwar, green, and anticorporate is obvious and incontrovertible. If you tell them you don’t think it’s that simple, they look at you like you’ve sold your soul to the devil. Not to unquestioningly accept the pure rightness of those positions is to have malignly mutated, to have become stupid, greedy, backward, and corrupt.

I wonder if it’s a generational thing or perhaps a regional thing (Amba’s roots are in deep blue Chicago and New York City as distinct from my red and purple Dallas and San Antonio roots), but my left-leaning friends and family are not nearly so absolutist. Yes, I know the type of which Amba writes and I do catch some flak for the rightward slide I’ve taken, but only a handful of those with whom I’m closest believe liberalism to be “obvious and incontrovertible.”

Almost all my closest friends and family are Democrats and only a tiny fraction are significantly conservative, so this isn’t a matter of me not knowing enough people on the left. However, other than my online blog friends and my parents, everyone I talk politics with is roughly my age. When I voice a more conservative stance during friendly debates, I am not looked at as a mutant but rather engaged. They may not often concede any ground, but they will take my opinions seriously.

I bring this up as a long way to voice a thought about why younger voters are backing Obama in such large numbers. It’s not just youth’s well-documented infatuation with the new and vibrant, it’s that when Obama talks of bridging divides, people of my age (33) and younger believe it is realistically achievable because the newer generations are not as intransigently partisan as are the baby boomers. Just as Obama’s bi-racial identity is a much more common experience in my generation, Obama’s inclination to be less rigid is more common to those of us who’ve grown up in (and grown weary with) the polarized glare of our parents’ ideologies.

Sure, you have deeply divisive younger people like thirty-something Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos whose obdurate and blindly loyal liberalism makes your average New York City baby boomer look positively bipartisan, but my experience leads me to believe, on the whole, us Gen Xers and Yers are less committed to defending ideology to the death and more interested in ending or at least assuaging the political bitterness. Maybe that’s just my specific cohort, but I think it may play into Obama’s ability to get his message across to younger voters. It may also be why, on the Republican side, John McCain, Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul captured the youth vote in the earlier contests, with all three offering messages significantly removed from the George W. Bush style of polarizing politics (represented this election by angry-pundit backed and youth-vote loser Mitt Romney).

It’s a decent theory – too critical of baby boomers and too complimentary of my generation for sure – but it’s worth thinking about and is far less derogatory than the going theory that younger voters are just naïve hope-addicts.

Cross-posted at Maverick Views.

This entry was posted on Saturday, February 16th, 2008 and is filed under Barack, Liberalism, News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

7 Responses to “Generation Gaps and Obama”

  1. Flo Says:

    Obama is not going to bridge divides. He is already making them worse.
    Signing a bill for the United Nations to tax americans sneaking in massive gun control. Obama is already losing and as people start to realize it will me detrimental for the United States that is still fundamentally a christian nation to have a president with muslim roots that goes to a racist church.
    God help us all if people don’t research these people to the max.

  2. Erik Says:

    This is in line with Sully’s thinking…
    I think its certainly a powerful movement and its making waves. Hillary is ignorant of it, or realizes that even she can’t pretend to offer herself as a candidate who can be conciliatory and open to bridging the political divide.
    The hope here is that regardless to the way the 18-30 individuals vote, they continue their political interest at least minimally. The percentage of registered voters who actually vote is horrendous.

  3. Dyre42 Says:

    Flo, specifically what Muslim roots are you referring to?

  4. Jim S Says:

    And where did you do your research, Flo? Sounds like stuff from reliable sources like NewsMax or WorldNetDaily to me.

  5. Jim S Says:

    OTOH, Alan, I’m considered to be the tail end of the boomer generation and I was leaning towards Obama and made the decision to vote for him weeks before the Missouri primaries. I just hope that he finds Republicans he can work with in Congress, given how the moderates are being driven from the party. I actually can’t think of one moderate Republican office holder in Missouri. Kansas has major conflicts between the Limbaugh/Bush part of the party and the Hagel/Schwarzenegger wing. Both states have seen defections from the Republican party to the Democratic party lately by moderates who just didn’t think they could accomplish anything as Republicans any longer.

  6. Joshua Says:

    Our last two presidents have promised to be uniters, but turned out to be the two most divisive presidents in recent history.

    I doubt Obama will fare any better if he is elected president, but if so, that won’t be his fault. Nor was it really Clinton’s or Bush the younger’s, for that matter. The American public has simply become so culturally fragmented that trying to “unite” it is like trying to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

  7. links for 2008-02-21 « Kevin Bondelli’s YD Blog Says:

    [...] Donklephant » Blog Archive » Generation Gaps and Obama [...]

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