Pod Save America - The Wilderness Chapter 4: Gen-Z Voters in Orange County
Episode Date: October 10, 2022Are young voters the key to the midterms? We hear from disillusioned Gen-Z voters in Orange County, California as well as their Member of Congress, Katie Porter. Then Data For Progress’ Evangel Penu...maka, organizer and former Texas Democratic Senate candidate Cristina Tzintzún-Ramirez, and John Della Volpe of Harvard Kennedy School join Jon to dig into what the voters had to say. New episodes of The Wilderness drop every Monday. Subscribe to The Wilderness wherever you get your podcasts.Apple: apple.co/thewildernessSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6JfsJlD5sBhVpEQEALNw4UStitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/the-wildernessIf you want to learn more about how you can take action in the fight for our democracy, head over to Vote Save America and Next Gen America: https://votesaveamerica.com/midterm-madness/https://nextgenamerica.org/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Democrats like to point the finger at the Republicans and say, those are the, you know, the old, the white, the rich, the dudes, right?
And we are the diverse party.
When it comes to age, I wouldn't point that finger so fast at the other side.
Because we actually have a big problem with that in Congress.
That's Katie Porter, a member of Congress from Orange County, California, talking about the Democratic Party's relationship with younger voters.
It's not like the Democrats are, you know, running around on bird and lift scooters and
the Republicans are in those, I've fallen and I can't get up things. I mean, come on.
Like, it's pretty much all old. I'm 48. I am in the future forum for young people. I'm
not young. I've had Botox multiple times.
I am not young.
As you can tell,
Congressman Winporter is a bit different
from most of her colleagues,
in the best possible way.
She's funny,
doesn't take herself too seriously,
talks like a normal human being,
and she's repeatedly gone viral
for one of the most low-tech forms
of communication imaginable,
a whiteboard.
Do you know what this number is?
This is Katie at a 2020 congressional hearing
about drug companies' price gouging.
She's questioning Big Pharma CEO Mark Aulis
while using a dry erase marker
to write the number 13 million on a whiteboard.
This was your compensation in 2017 for being CEO of Celgene,
and that's a lot of money.
It's 200 times the average American's income
and 360 times what the average senior gets on Social Security.
In just a day, the C-SPAN clip of this grilling
is viewed more than 15 million times on Twitter.
And that's just one of many Katie Porter whiteboard moments
that's broken through.
Her most popular TikTok videos have up to 5 million views, and she's got over 150,000 followers on Instagram,
many of them as young as her three children. My children constantly tell me,
your stuff is so sus, which is short for suspicious. And so I'm like, I don't feel
very hip because they're constantly telling me that I'm not. But when we looked at our social
media accounts, whether it's TikTok, whether it's Instagram,
even on Twitter, I have a lot of younger followers.
It was a little bit of a puzzle to me.
I mean, I drive a minivan.
Like, I'm not the coolest.
She must be doing something right.
Katie Porter was probably the most progressive candidate to flip a Republican House seat in 2018,
a race she won again in 2020.
She's the first Democrat to ever represent California's 45th,
a district which has become more diverse over the years
with an electorate that's looking more like UC Irvine,
the school where Katie used to teach law.
In two close elections,
young voters helped put her over the top.
And that's been true for Democratic candidates
all over the country.
Between the 2014 and 2018 midterms, youth turnout more than doubled.
And Democrats won more than two-thirds of voters between the ages of 18 and 29.
Massive turnout coast to coast.
Generation Z did show up to the polls.
We are seeing a surge of first-time voters.
Between the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections,
youth turnout jumped from just under 40% to 50%.
And Joe Biden won three-fifths of these voters.
Gen Z is now the most diverse generation in history.
Nearly half are young people of color.
And in a Gallup poll earlier this year,
one out of every five identified as LGBTQ.
There are now more young people registered to vote than ever before.
And by 2028,
Gen Z and millennials combined will make up just about half of all eligible voters in America.
But that doesn't mean they'll always show up for Democrats or show up at all.
Joe Biden actually did slightly worse with young voters in 2020 than Democrats did in 2018.
And there are plenty of reasons for these voters to feel disconnected from politics right now. This is a generation that's come of age during multiple wars,
the Great Recession, the Trump presidency, the pandemic, police brutality, climate change.
It has been a brutal few decades. And a lot of young people have never had the experience of
interacting with a government that actually cares about them. So when things go wrong in some of my seniors' lives, they pick up the phone and
they call my office. Some of them call almost every day. Some of them call once or twice.
Young people, when things go wrong in their lives, they get frustrated. They lose confidence.
And that's because for a long time in this area, is a good example, there haven't been responsive
representatives. Katie also recognizes that because the way young people get their news
has changed, they're also a bit harder to reach. This is why I spend time, you know, along with
dealing with insomnia on Twitter or on Instagram, like reading things. And if they're my constituent,
we'll DM them. We'll reach out. We just introduced a bill based on something that happened to a
constituent. I saw it on Twitter. She didn't call my office. She took to Twitter
to describe what had happened to her, how government had wronged her. And we reached out
to her and we were able to create a bill and introduce it. It's bipartisan. We buy parts of
the Senate. But I found her and that's part of my job. Of course, Katie Porter can't DM with all
the hundreds of thousands of young people she represents.
And she's got another very competitive race in 2022.
Thanks to the redistricting process,
she's also got a new district
and hundreds of thousands of new voters to meet,
as do Democratic candidates all over the country
in purple house districts just like Katie's.
The question is,
how do Democrats actually reach young people
who might be disillusioned with politics and get them to show up in November?
Because their votes could mean the difference between a Democratic Congress and one controlled by MAGA crazies.
I drove down to Orange County to find out.
I went to Irvine, the one city in both Katie Porter's old and new district,
and sat down with a diverse group of nine 20-something voters who all identify as
Democrats and voted for Joe Biden in 2020. But they don't follow politics too closely,
and they're not too happy with many politicians in either party.
Afterwards, I gathered another group of experts to help unpack what we heard from these voters.
My name is Cristina Censun-Ramirez, and I run NextGen America, which is the country's largest
youth voter mobilization group. Last election,
we helped mobilize one in nine of the young folks that turned out.
I'm Evangeline Pinamaca. I'm a lead analyst at Data for Progress.
Data for Progress is a progressive think tank and polling firm.
My name is John Della Volpe. I am the director of polling at the Institute of Politics at the
Harvard Kennedy School. I was a Biden pollster on the 2020 campaign focusing on the youth vote, and I am
the author of Fights, How Gen Z is Channeling Their Fear and Passion to Save America.
We'll hear from Christina, John, Evangel, and nine Orange County voters after the break.
Hello, everybody. Hey there. How are you? Great, John. Good to see you, everybody.
Hey there. How are you?
Good, John.
Great, John. Good to see you, Christina. I was excited to see you on the list.
I sat down with nine pretty disillusioned Gen Z voters in Irvine, California, about a week after the Supreme Court released the Dobbs decision, which ended the constitutional right to an abortion.
As you'll hear, these young voters were outraged.
In fact,
there was an interesting anecdote from our recruitment process for this focus group.
One of the things we screened for was whether the participant was likely to vote in the midterms.
We wanted young Biden voters who weren't yet sure if they'd vote in November.
Those kind of voters were fairly easy to find before Dobbs. After the decision, though,
they actually became more difficult to find, at least in Orange County. Instead, we found more potential participants
who told us they were very likely to vote. It's just one anecdote, and as you'll hear from these
voters, Democrats still have a lot of work to do to make sure they cast their ballots in November.
But clearly, something's happening out there. I talked about what it might be and what we heard
from this focus group with youth voter mobilization expert Christina Simpson Ramirez, as well as pollsters John De La Volpe and Evangel Panamaca.
Okay, so I started asking the group what issues affect them personally, what they care about, and what doesn't get enough attention.
We'll get to the opening clip in a minute.
But first,
I would love to hear from the three of you on this question. What are some of the most common
misconceptions that pundits and politicians have about Gen Z voters? And what should the rest of
us know about what they believe and want out of politics? Christina, start with you.
When people think about young people, I think they exclusively think of college kids.
And what we have to remember is that the majority of Americans under age 25 actually don't have a college degree.
So there are a lot of working class young people.
And this is one of the most diverse generations in American history.
When you add Gen Z plus millennials, this is the largest generational voting bloc that is the most diverse and the most progressive. And that while they are voting for Democrats,
they overwhelmingly, they are not just trying to make changes on the margins,
they want a disruption of the status quo. And so that's what you see young people voting for.
And the last thing I would say is I think that people think of young people as apathetic. And
I don't find that at all, especially in Gen Z, you find a generation that's very tuned in,
that cares a lot about the future of the country, that's participating, whether it's in protests or voting, at higher rates than we've
seen in a long time in American history. We have Donald Trump, if not for young voters,
specifically in Arizona, in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Georgia. We don't have a Democrat
Senate. We don't have our first African-American woman on the Supreme Court and so many other
things. So without young people, it's a very different country today. That's number one. Number two, I think, is unlike
every other generation that preceded them, all generations have dealt with their fair share of
chaos and trauma. This generation has uniquely been dealt a set of cards that have been incredibly
traumatic from their first memories in school, hiding under
a desk for red alert shooter drills, or their parents concerned about the great reception.
They've dealt with so many of those issues. At the same time, John, they don't remember a time
when America was truly united. There really are key issues that motivate this group of voters.
Climate change is definitely a huge one that they want to see action on for future generations. Student debt cancellation. They are motivated by issues. And so really honing in
on what's going to mobilize them and what they're interested in, I think is key.
That's a great segue to the first couple of clips. I asked the group what issues
most affected them and what issues they cared about the most. And here's what they said.
affected them and what issues they cared about the most and here's what they said I should say that minimum wage should increase a bit because they're living
here in Orange County is very expensive of course so yeah definitely like rent
and like places to live yes how many people have been affected by inflation
rising costs rising costs I rising costs of gas.
Gas, yeah.
Gas, especially gas.
I know, like, why did no one say gas?
I was like, maybe.
Pretty much, so pretty much everyone?
Well, no one said it, but, like, it's right there, so I don't know.
Does anyone have student debt?
How many people have student debt here?
Three?
Okay.
How concerned are you about paying off student debt?
Not that worried. Not that worried? What are some of the issues that are most important to you personally? Three. How concerned are you about paying off student debt?
Not that worried.
Not that worried?
What are some of the issues that are most important to you personally?
I just want to have somewhere to live and not have to be able to share with other people.
I want to be able to live on my own.
It's really, really hard.
I have a pretty decent paying job, and I still can't afford to live on my own.
Homelessness.
Homelessness.
When she said homelessness, I really, like, I really felt that one.
Because, you know, you see a lot of homeless people.
And the city is pushing them to different areas.
But, you know, at some point, there's not going to be a place for them to go.
Yeah, I was going to say, like, cost of living, too.
Like, it's basically, like, almost impossible for people to buy a house like in California. I think the living situation, being able to afford buying a house on your own is
a big concern of mine and also school. Definitely the student loan. I want to be a lawyer so I know
that it's going to be really costly. It kind of ties in with everyone else, but poverty.
Having more resources for those living in poverty.
How concerned are all of you about climate change?
Is that something that you think about often?
I feel like I should.
11 out of 10.
11 out of 10 for you.
Self-consciously I do because, you know, it's pretty hot right now to me.
Yeah, I do because it can affect our food, our water, our environment, our atmosphere, you know, little things that maybe we don't think about that can really affect our living situation or like our health as well.
To be honest, I don't really think about it.
I feel like right now it's not too bad.
I'm by the pool like in the summer and I'm fine, you know.
no, it's not too bad. I'm by the pool, like in the summer, and I'm fine, you know.
If you had asked me before this group, which issues would come up most frequently, I'd have said what Evangeline did in the last answer, which is student debt and climate. Both of those did
come up. But were any of you surprised by how much these voters talked about cost of living issues,
especially housing? Evangeline, does this track with your data?
Yeah, I will say nationally,
inflation, you know, cost of living is definitely top on voters' minds across demographics. It's
kind of, you know, overwhelming to see. It's even on the minds of, you know, younger voters,
as some of the ones that we just listened to pointed out, especially in California.
Christine and John, have you heard similar things, too, from young voters?
I mean, I think that this is the first generation in American history to be worse off than their parents.
So they look around at grotesque and runaway income inequality and then they feel it in their own lives.
They feel the fact that rent is going up, that they can't afford a house.
So that doesn't surprise me at all.
John, I know you've done a lot of pulling around student debt relief.
How important and motivating is that issue to young voters?
done a lot of polling around student debt relief. How important and motivating is that issue to young voters? The definition of the American dream for young people is what your respondent said.
It's to literally move out of their parents' house and feel some sense of independence,
you know, in a job that they aspire to and not have to search on the back pages of the internet
for seven roommates that they don't know. Okay. That's our definition of kind of happiness.
And I think understanding that, then we can put student debt into context in a couple
of different places.
One is the degree to which that's a barrier to achieving that dream, one.
But also, I think in this cycle, that student debt is almost shorthand for first-time voters'
commitment to voting for President Biden in 2020.
Christina, NextGen organizes around climate.
What's the most effective way to talk about this issue
and get young people mobilized around it in your experience?
I think with climate, it can feel so big and so impossible.
That can turn off a lot of young people.
I think especially with young people, the messaging is often negative
about like, you
don't vote, you don't show up.
And that has proven not to work.
The messaging has to be honor people's pain, paint a vision of the future that they can
build and tell them about the power they have to make it happen.
I mentioned earlier that I did this focus group the week after the Supreme Court came
down with the Dobbs decision.
And when I asked about the decision, everyone was pretty angry.
Let's listen.
How do you all feel about the Supreme Court's decision
last week to overturn Roe v. Wade,
which ends the constitutional right to an abortion?
Awful.
Don't support Roe.
Awful.
Like, what the fuck, Roe?
I've been seeing so many just everywhere, like all over the news, all over TikTok, all over social media.
I just, I've heard so many horror stories.
There's people who get, you know, raped and abused.
And, you know, I saw this one story.
This girl was sexually assaulted by her brother and got pregnant by her brother.
And she had to get an abortion for that.
So I think it's a huge setback to how far we've come already, for sure.
It's going to ruin a lot of lives.
Yeah.
John and Evangeline, are there consequences of this decision, do you think, enough to convince young people to vote who might have planned on staying home?
Evangeline?
So we had pulled this pre and post the Dobbs decision.
And so pre-inflation across the board was the top issue.
Post-Dobbs, we actually see about a 13-point shift in younger voters viewing abortion rights
with greater importance, selecting this as our most important issue for 2022.
It's important to think about how this can mobilize younger voters in giving them a reason.
You know, we don't have Trump in this election to mobilize them,
but I think having these rights taken away
that they thought was guaranteed for them,
I think can serve that purpose for why they should turn out to vote.
John, what are you seeing in the data?
I don't think there's a question that this will further energize
young people to turn out.
But I also think it taps into this broader theme
that we've been hearing through qualitative
as well as quantitative about this concern,
and Evangel just mentioned it,
about losing individual rights and freedoms.
This was in the air well before, frankly, the Dobbs decision.
And it's something that wasn't just reflective
in talking to conservatives as it normally would be, but now with independents and Democrats.
Christina, how are you all at NextGen mobilizing young people around protecting abortion access ahead of the midterms?
The day the Dobbs decision came out, we had 10,000 young people sign up and say, I want to take action on this issue.
It was one of the largest days we've seen young people say, I want to stand up and do something and I'll pledge to vote.
I'll do whatever I can. And that it's going to be a huge issue for this electorate. And,
you know, I'm sure many of us were at the rallies that happened the day after Roe. I was in Austin,
Texas, where there was, it was just young people. It was thousands of young people and they were
shouting, vote them out, vote them out.
One, two, three, four, abortion is worth fighting for.
One, two, three, four, these were all first time voters in 2020.
They all voted for Joe Biden. I asked them why. Every single person said that the primary reason
they voted for Joe Biden was to get Donald Trump out of office. I then asked them for
words and phrases to describe the Republican Party. And here's what I got. Mean,
entitled, racist, greedy, closed-minded, self-centered. So no Trump fans in the group,
no Republican fans in the group, but none of them thought that things were going well in the country
today. And when I asked why, here's what they had to say. For sure, the abortion thing, like racism and stuff like that,
that's still alive and well.
I still see cops and all that, you know, being unfair to civilians,
and that still bothers me a lot.
Yeah, I stay concerned because after Roe v. Wade was overturned,
the Supreme Court now wants to go to gay marriage.
They want to do birth control, so I don't know when they're going to stop.
What more rights can they take away from us? That's why I'm concerned.
I kind of just felt super sick of this country.
It is not going in a good direction for a majority of people,
but it seems like nothing is really being done about it.
The world is changing really fast, and there's a lot of people but it seems like nothing is really being done about it the world is changing really
fast and there's a lot of people that are like especially the ones that are in power like of the
older generation that are basically stuck in their ways and like thinking that this is the only way
that things should be slash have to be to be quote-unquote right and so of course they're
going to press their ideals on a new and changing world, which don't make sense now, the days.
I have to agree with him.
We do have, like, a big issue with, like, different generations.
Politically, we have an older generation in power.
They're just getting new people like AOC and, like, Beto O'Rourke coming up.
And there's going to be a clash.
There's going to be disagreements.
So I just think considering, considering like ever since just pandemic 2020
BLM, this is
just like a huge step back
considering everything that we've been through.
I think it's also really messed up that they're also
I've heard talk of them trying to
go back on the LGBTQ community
and trying to like, you know,
put laws against gay marriage and everything like they were
saying too. The fact that we have a lot of older people who are from a completely different
generation with different thoughts and opinions in different ways that they were raised that
they're in office. I just, I don't agree. I think their mindset is completely different than ours
and they're not seeing what's changing. So this is probably one of the most frustrated and
disappointed groups of voters I've spoken to.
And it does seem like their central problem with politics isn't necessarily partisan, but generational.
Christina, as an organizer, how do you keep these kinds of voters from giving up on politics altogether?
I've always said that voting is the most basic thing you must do, but it is not the only thing you should do. And I think that young people understand that that is simply one tool
for change. I think where young people get frustrated is when they're told that it's the
only tool to make change. And what I heard from, you know, and see from young people is that they
are repulsed by the Republican Party, but they're also determined to remake the Democratic Party.
I remember the Democratic Party when it was in the same place
that the Republicans were on criminal justice reform. I remember the time when the Democratic
Party was where Republicans were on tax policy. So we have come a long way in pushing the Democratic
Party to answer better to the diverse and changing demographics of this country and its deep-rooted
working class elements. I think we have to keep hitting those messages and tell that to young people. Evangeline, how do you think the Democratic Party should bridge what
is clearly a generational gap? I think another thing that we can look to is ways that local
issues and state politics and voting down ballot really does make an impact where nationally,
the structural changes that need to take place are so deep rooted. And I can
understand why voters feel disillusioned about the change that can take place. But there are
local races and state based races that really can have an impact on these voters lives as well.
John, what do you think?
The challenge for Democrats, they need to throw out the old playbook to encourage a young person
to participate, you need to do two things. The first thing you need to do is, as you mentioned, you need to build some trust and some faith
in the system, in politics, that it's actually worth their time to participate. So it doesn't
mean they're apathetic. It's that they don't always see the tangible difference that politics
can make. Once you do that, then you need to position to the messenger to be the kind
of the agent of change or progress. Well, let's talk about the messenger. In that last clip,
you heard a young woman named Alejandra mentioned AOC and Beto O'Rourke. I wanted to know more about
what kind of political leaders and candidates this group liked and who their dream presidential
candidates would be, especially since the group's unanimous opinion was that Joe Biden is too old to run for president again.
Here's what they said.
So you know Bernie Sanders?
Him. That's it.
Bernie Sanders?
Nothing else?
A couple Bernie Sanders?
He's perfect.
And his age would not be a concern?
No, it would.
It would for Bernie?
The type of Bernie Sanders kind of person at like 50.
The AOC.
AOC?
Yeah, she's, I like how determined and passionate she is when she speaks.
There's a lot of things that I like about AOC.
Michelle Obama was great.
She's just a very smart woman.
I feel like she has a good mind and probably brings some peace, but who knows.
I think our Gavin Newsom has she has a good mind and probably brings some peace, but who knows? I think our
Gavin Newsom has been doing
a good job. He makes a lot
of things happen. How many of you think Gavin
Newsom is doing a good job as governor?
What he just did for all the
people, like for Roe versus Wade,
he's making California like a safe
haven for people to come over here and get
abortions without any consequences from the other
states. He also signed that every household that makes, like, combined, like, $150,000,
or if you're an individual and you make $75,000 or under, they give you, like, a gas card,
and you can use it, like, for gas or food, so.
50-year-old Bernie Sanders, AOC, Gavin Newsom, and Michelle Obama. Does anyone want to
take a shot at what those political figures all have in common? Or why they all have qualities
or records that this group of voters admires? John? Often, I think, around those qualities of
trust and values and getting things done and having some urgency. This is not a normal time.
When I talk to younger people, young activists, that's the first thing they say.
These are not normal times.
They appreciate that.
But they believe that Washington is acting like they always ask with all the urgency
that perhaps Gavin Newsom on the West Coast is showing as brought up by that young woman.
Evangeline, what do you think?
I think they all are showing voters
that they will take action
on the issues that impact all of our lives.
And they really center the struggles
that voters face in giving tangible solutions.
I think the other thing too
is just how they communicate to voters.
And I think AOC has really nailed this
in the Instagram post she does
after these major events that happen,
taking the time to answer voters' concerns, build that trust, and show how you can be impactful. Yeah, Christina, I was sort
of surprised by the specificity with which she remembered Gavin Newsom's actions both on Roe
and on the gas rebate card, because this is also a group of voters that doesn't pay super close attention
to politics in the news.
What do you think all those figures
have in common that were cited?
Ultimately, what young people care about
is delivery of the policy issues
that they care about.
I saw people that they mentioned
that they felt like were fighting
and standing up for ordinary people.
But it feels like a lot of times in politics,
people are not standing up for ordinary people.
Like Bernie Sanders had a villain and you always need a villain in the story, which was just billionaires.
I think what Republicans made clear and what the Supreme Court, the ultra right, made clear to young people is, yes, many of them went and voted against Trump because they saw fascism on the ballot.
And they just made clear that fascism is on the ballot again in 2022 and that they have the power to stop it.
And I think that young people are going to turn out to stop it again.
After the break, we'll find out what Gen Z voters in Orange County
think about the upcoming midterms and where they actually get their news.
Plus, more Katie Porter.
Welcome back.
After the voters in Orange County talked about which issues mattered most to them,
I wanted to find out what they thought about the upcoming election and whether they'd actually vote.
All right, let's get to the midterms. So we've talked about how one challenge for Democrats with young voters in 2022 is inspiring them.
But I found out with this group that another challenge is simply educating them about the election itself.
Take a listen.
How many of you plan on voting
in the midterm elections this November?
What is that?
Okay, we've got three here, four.
I could.
I filled out a ballot like a couple weeks ago.
Was that for the November election?
I don't even know.
I believe there was a primary.
So there was a primary election.
Okay.
I'll just do what I did again.
Do that again.
Who is your member of Congress and do you think they're doing a good job?
I don't know anyone in Congress. Okay, that's totally fine.
Does anyone know who their member of Congress is? No. Okay.
Can you help people understand, who are listening, like why a group of young people who were politically engaged enough to vote for Joe Biden in 2020 might not know what a midterm
election is or who their member of Congress is.
John, what do you think?
Number one, I hope every single Democrat within the sound of our voice listens to that focus
group, John, and appreciates all the votes that are being left on the table, because
this is a unique opportunity that may not come again, right?
That you have an opposition party that is not just not making an effort, but openly hostile
to the values of which we've been talking about for this entire conversation. And yet you had
nine good people who could articulate the issues, what matters to them and what matters to the
community. And they're unsure, frankly, because of lack of a civics education. We talk often about
the role of social media and the internet. And one of the ways in which dozens of young people tell me personally, and we can see
in our surveys, that they're trying to create some measure of self-care is to turn away
from the daily repetition of the negativity of the news.
Rather than watching our day-to-day basis, they choose to check in when it's comfortable
for them.
They are not
checking in now during the summer. They know what's happening with the Supreme Court. I think
they will check in as the fall approaches. Yeah, Christina, clearly these voters care
deeply about important political issues, but they couldn't be more disconnected from politics
itself. What are some strategies that you all use at NextGen to bridge this gap?
There's a cyclical problem with young voters, which is most candidates look at who are my regular midterm voters and that's all they focus on.
And where Republicans and right wing strategies are so much stronger than progressives, they look at the map and say, where can we expand?
And with young voters, we can only expand and grow.
But the number one reason they will not go vote is because they'll say, I don't know who to vote for.
No one contacted me. I can't tell you how many young voters say, and it's their super
competitive race that they live in in their district. And they're registered to vote. They're
eligible to vote. And no campaigner candidate has come and spoken to them. You know, you both brought
up media. So I want to end on that because getting through to these voters, we have to go through the
media. So I asked questions about their media habits and their views of the media,
and here's what they said.
I want to talk a little bit about media.
How often do you follow the news?
Pretty often, every day.
A lot.
A lot.
It just follows you.
Like, it's just there.
The news follows you.
Yeah, it does.
I like Serena.
The news finds me.
Yeah, I agree. It just follows you, especially. Like, I think I get most of it from, like Serena. The news finds me. Yeah, I agree. It just follows you, especially.
I think I get most of it from TikTok.
I don't specifically go on news channels.
What's your primary source of news?
Usually I'll go on Twitter.
If not, I'll go through WC Register for local news.
CNN.
TikTok, Snapchat, Daily Mail,
Instagram,
any form of social media.
But mostly Daily Mail for some reason.
I feel like they post a lot on there.
That's how I keep up.
I like Associated Press and
The Guardian.
Just Twitter and TikTok pretty much.
Anyone on Facebook?
TikTok?
Who's on TikTok?
Yes.
Everyone on TikTok?
Yes.
What makes you more likely to trust something you see on social media?
The more you see it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Repetition.
I guess like the amount of people that interact with it and stuff, too.
Like, if it's on your For You page, obviously it's important.
What frustrates you most about the media?
Too much Kardashians.
Too much Kardashians.
I feel like media doesn't cover a lot of, like, who's, like, in the Senate or Congress or anything like that.
Because I have no clue who those people are.
I could vote.
I could look at that paper and I could see a bunch of names.
I'm like, who is this? What, like, I don't know. I need to see, like, put a face to it,
see what they've done, who they are. Like, I feel like we don't have like the tools to,
I mean, I guess we do, but like, it's not put in front of me. Like, you know what I mean? Like,
I feel like I don't know enough about them.
How do you think the different ways that young people consume political media,
which is primarily through social media, particularly TikTok and Instagram and Twitter, affects their views about politics?
John?
I was trying to think somewhere there's going to be like a sweet spot in the spectrum between too much Kardashians, right, and a perfectly curated political Twitter sphere.
Not there yet.
Right. We're not there. We're not there yet.
But what they're asking for is, I think it said the news finds them. And I think they're getting
more news than they may appreciate because they're talking about these issues. I think,
you know, multiple times a day or multiple times a week, homelessness, the cost of living, etc.
What we collectively need to find are the more AOCs who can figure out how to check in
appropriately through Snap, through Instagram, who everything she does isn't a fully slick produced
piece. Can I ask you all, because we've all mentioned AOC a number of times as an example
of a really effective communicator. I'll tell you a secret. Most people don't really know what capitalism is. Most people don't even know what socialism is. But most people are not capitalists because they don't have capitalist money. They're not billionaires.
What is it about how AOC communicates via social media that makes her so effective?
makes her so effective? I mean, I think that she's authentic. I think she helps them understand policy in layman terms and what it means to their lives. And also one thing I think she's also really
good about answering people's questions on all different kinds of topics and opening and that
authenticity speaks to young people. You look at Gen Z for Change, these young TikTokers that have
organized and coalesced and now have a reach of like 500 million young people that they can
reach at a, you know, one video post that they can all do on a certain topic.
I don't think that candidates have to go recreate. They just have to go work with
the authentic voices of young people that are already online and have huge followings.
Christina, Evangeline, John, thank you so much for your time. This was great.
Thanks.
Thank you.
It's great to be with you. It's
such an important subject. Thanks. A lot has happened since our Orange County focus group
and panel discussion that might have an impact on what young voters do this November. Republican
politicians proposing abortion bans, Democrats passing the most sweeping climate bill in history,
and Joe Biden for giving up to $20,000 of student debt.
So a few weeks ago, I checked in with one more political expert you heard from at the beginning of the episode,
who actually represents the young voters we heard from.
I'm Katie Porter. I'm a congresswoman from Orange County, California.
I'm a single mom of three lightly supervised children, and I love oversight.
I didn't interview many politicians this season
because usually they're not allowed to be that interesting,
especially when they're in a tough race.
But again, Katie Porter's different.
And instead of just chatting with her,
I thought it might be useful to play Katie a few clips from the focus group
and get her reaction in real time.
I started with the clip where the young voters talked about
why they thought the country's going in the wrong direction
and which issues matter most to them.
She, of course, immediately started taking notes.
What's your first reaction listening to all that?
I think young people are paying attention to what's going on in this country.
That was a very good list of things that are on people's minds at all ages. So things like inflation, things like concern about rising hatred and extremism, things about rights being taken away. That actually is some of the really important things that's happened in this country. young people for paying attention. I think they do know what's going on. Some of what's going on
is not good, and it's okay for us to acknowledge that. We can't be credible unless we're honest
about some of the things that are going wrong. The Dobbs decision and losing a fundamental right,
that is a terrible, scary thing. And so what we're hearing from these young people is that
they think that that's a terrible, scary thing. And I would say, good, let's listen to those voices and let's respond to them politically.
Do those responses track with what you've been hearing from young people in your district?
Yes, definitely. I mean, I obviously meet with a lot of different kinds of young people.
I have my own three children who are my three worst constituents, I just want to say.
But I think that that largely tracks. I mean, they're not the only concerns, but I think all
of those are things that I have heard before. And then the one I would like to talk a little more with you about, which I think is so important, is the cost of living and the ability to have a home.
Homes with homeownership is one of the biggest anxieties facing people around this country,
not just in high cost of living areas like here, but in every part and pocket of this country. So I'm thrilled that you heard this.
And I hope everybody in Washington and every political consultant is listening
because housing is a defining issue.
The party that figures out how to solve this problem and talk about this problem
is going to be the party with the enduring majority for the next 20 years. So I obviously did this before Biden's student
loan announcement. What's the reaction been in your district from your constituents over the
last week? Do you think this is something that will motivate young people to vote who might
otherwise have stayed home? So I would say that student loans are probably one of the most
divisive issues. Student loan forgiveness, one of the most divisive issues.
Student loan forgiveness, one of the most divisive issues right now in Orange County.
I get a lot of strong reactions one way or the other and a lot of powerful, compelling
stories, frankly, in both directions.
So when I get a question from somebody who's hostile to student loan forgiveness, I try
to say, let me give you some facts that might help you.
You said you think students should be able to pay off what they got. They got a degree, they ought to pay that off.
40% of people with student loan debt didn't graduate. That's a problem. So who you think of
as a student loan debtor actually isn't necessarily who's a student loan debtor. Oh, you worked your
way through school? You flipped burgers? So did my dad at his state university. You cannot flip enough burgers. You can't forego enough lattes to afford
state university today because the costs are so much different. And so today, about half of public
school, public university graduates have student loans.
So that's actually a lot of what we're talking about here. And so for the same people who say,
like, we should forgive it all, 10,000 is not enough, I try to back that out and say, look,
the 10,000 is going to go a long ways toward helping the people with the lowest incomes.
They actually tend to also have the lowest loans. The people with the highest incomes,
generally, there's exceptions. But generally, if you have a lot of loans, some of those people,
not all, but some also got graduate degrees and tend to have higher incomes. So the $10,000 does a lot to address some of the racial wealth gap. It does a lot to try to correct that. So I would
say, as I've explained and given facts to people, I don't think I've convinced everybody one way or the other.
But I do think I've slowed them down a little bit.
I've taken the temperature down a little bit.
And they thought, maybe I'm not as right as I thought I was.
So maybe I shouldn't be as righteous one way or the other.
And that, I think, is part of how we build policy conversations on difficult topics like this.
That, I think, is part of how we build policy conversations on difficult topics like this.
So the clip I really wanted to play for Katie is the one where some of the young voters didn't know what or when the midterms were,
and none of them could identify their member of Congress, who, of course, is Katie Porter.
I realize this would probably offend or at least surprise most politicians,
but I figured Katie would have a more insightful reaction.
She didn't disappoint.
I believe there was a primary.
So granted, we intentionally selected a group of people that doesn't pay close attention to politics,
but they did vote for Biden.
So like, how do we get them to turn out for you?
These are mostly your constituents and other Democrats.
So, you know, I think that this reflects
one of the real challenges that we have with younger voters,
which is partly because of housing costs, partly because of school.
They move a lot.
And then redistricting added a whole bunch of confusion to this.
So I'm spending a lot of my time getting to know the roughly half a million new humans that Santa Claus brought me for Christmas.
You know, I asked for diamonds, John, and I got half a million new potential constituents. It wasn't the best Christmas I've ever had,
but I'm excited to meet these new folks. You know, there's also a timing issue here, which is
whenever people say, oh, nobody knows what's going on, no one knows. These students, they're trying
to get through their day. They're trying to go to their job. They're trying to pay off their loans. They're trying to save up for a house. This is one of a bajillion things that
it means to be a successful American. And the person who said, my ballot comes, I fill it out,
I mail it in. A plus! That's the entire project, buddy. Like, if you're doing that, I give that an
A. Okay, maybe you're not a volunteer, so I give you an A, not an A plus, but that's a pretty good
answer. So I think it's really incumbent on me to make sure we reach these voters.
I think what's been wrong with politics too long is my colleagues think they're too important.
We're not that important to most people.
It's our job to find these folks and to connect with them.
It's not their job to find us.
Their job is just to find their ballot.
It's my job to make sure I find them.
job is just to find their ballot. It's my job to make sure I find them.
I mean, one way that you have broken through, certainly as a member of Congress, is we should talk about the whiteboard. Yeah. Like, why do you think that in this very noisy political environment
that you hauling out a whiteboard breaks through all the noise. And I've thought about this a lot, and I've asked some young people,
and basically the answer is you get that we don't have confidence,
and you're actively, you're trying to show us that government doesn't always work.
You're not assuming that we all believe in you.
And so I think this goes to this kind of disillusion point, which is, you know, is anyone really
going to fix anything?
What difference does it make who my congressperson is?
So the whiteboard is just a tool.
But the point is to really show people in an accessible way what I'm doing in Washington.
What do congresspeople do?
What questions are we asking?
Are we asking the questions that you have on your
mind? So I think the visuals help, particularly in a world where people are watching things on
their phone with the sound turned off. They help invite people into the dialogue. But I think at
the end of the day, it's the willingness to kind of hold power to account. And those whiteboard
moments are just evidence of something happening that they think should happen a lot more.
Yeah, that's so interesting because, so there were other parts of this group where I got into politics.
And I heard a couple times from different participants.
They would talk about people in Washington or the people in politics, they're just an older generation and they don't get it.
I don't think young people necessarily only want young representatives.
young people necessarily only want young representatives. Young people want representatives who are willing to look hard at the realities of the economy and the society they're living in.
And, you know, I'm not just elected to represent the people who vote for me. I'm also elected to
represent the 12-year-olds who can't vote and the two-year-olds who are coming down the pike
and the 22-year-old who changed addresses
twice and therefore doesn't ever get their ballot in time. I represent all those people and I need
to be thinking about all of those people. So when we talk about diverse leadership,
multi-generational has to be one of the things. We're talking about diverse leadership based on
race, based on life experience, based on class, based on generation is part of that. But it's not just being of the generation.
It's also seeing the experiences of people whose life experiences are different than yours.
There's obviously a lot to worry us about the state of democracy.
What is making you hopeful right now about the state of democracy
and about the fact that hopefully this generation of people that I was just talking to will lead us to a better place.
This is a very nerdy answer.
I'm guessing this is not what people usually say.
Ready for this?
It's Biden's competition policy.
So let me connect the dots for you.
President Biden and his team are fundamentally tackling the problem of monopoly in virtually every part and pocket of this economy, whether that's technology, whether that's agriculture, whether that's banking.
He has put people in office who understand that in order to have a healthy democracy, here's the democracy connection.
In a capitalist society, you have to have a healthy economy.
If you don't give people means and opportunities to buy houses, to have wealth, to contribute, to go out in their lives, to get degrees,
you're not going to have a vibrant democracy because people are going to feel like, what's the point?
I'm oppressed.
I'm oppressed economically.
I'm oppressed politically.
They're connected for most people in their daily lives.
It's so important that you made the connection between the healthy democracy and the healthy
economy, because, again, I think one of the big divides that keeps coming up in all these focus
groups is you've got Democrats in the media and we're focusing on January 6th as we should and
the threats of democracy and Republicans are going to overturn democracy and all that's very scary.
You talk to voters and they're like, well, I just I need to live.
I need to I'm worried about the cost of housing.
And I do think like if you want people to get into the work of saving democracy, you have to convince them that democracy is worth saving.
And to convince them democracy is worth saving, you have to convince them that it works for them and that it actually makes their lives better. Yep. So here is democracy by electing a president willing to stand up to
corporate power, actually creating more economic opportunity. And as these people see their
economic opportunities multiply, they think, how did this happen? Oh, it's because we voted for
this guy, Biden, who cares about working people
as opposed to Trump, who only cares about himself. Like, look, maybe I'll vote again.
Things got better in my life. And so I do think they are intertwined. They get that,
and we as Democrats better figure it out. Katie Porter, you are the best.
Oh, thank you. I always make rule for the wilderness,
but especially this season, I was like, I don't think we want to talk to politicians because we bring politicians on.
They do a lot of talking points.
But I kept telling the team, I was like, Katie Porter will be perfect for this episode.
Well, I have to say, my team did give me talking points.
I just didn't use them.
Instead, I did what I think elected officials need to do a lot more, which is I listened to what the voters said, what these folks said, and then I tried to be responsive to it.
I mean, that actually is the job.
It's not talking.
It's listening.
Katie talked about how a vibrant democracy requires a healthy economy.
How Democrats need to prove they're the party of working people by standing up
to corporate power
on behalf of voters
who struggle to pay
for basic necessities
like housing.
We were one of those people
where the owner sold
right from under us.
And I had,
there was no weeklies
for us to go to.
We were hotel hopping.
And that's 70 to 100
and something dollars
for us to go to
a decent hotel.
And I had to do that
for three months before we got our house. And I had to do that for three months
before we got our house.
Next week, we'll talk to some people
who know that struggle well
when I sit down with seven working class Latino voters
in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Voters who may have supported Democrats in the past,
but are much more up for grabs in November.
I'll see you there.
The Wilderness is an original podcast from Crooked Media.
Season 3 is produced by Dust Light Productions.
I'm your host, Jon Favreau. From Crooked Media, our executive Thank you. Our executive producer is Misha Youssef. Arwen Nix is our executive editor. Stephanie Cohn is the senior producer.
Tamika Adams is the producer, and Francesca Diaz is the assistant producer.
This episode was sound designed by Francesca Diaz with help from Stephanie Cohn.
Valentino Rivera is our senior engineer.
Martin Fowler is the composer.
Thanks to our development and operations coordinator at Dusklight, Rachel Garcia,
and to Chrissy Marin for archival legal review. If you want to learn more about how you can take action in the fight
for our democracy, head over to votesaveamerica.com slash midterms.