Trump’s millennial problem: The snowflakes are becoming a blizzard
Polls show the majority of millennials view Trump as an illegitimate president, and they don't like Ivanka either
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Millennials, those born between 1981 and 1997, have become the generation the right loves to hate. Only days after the November election, Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway appeared on Fox News Channel’s “Hannity” to discuss the outbreak of anti-Trump protests. Rather than take seriously the issues that voters were protesting, Conway chose to use this as an opportunity to denigrate young voters: “We are just treating these adolescents and millennials like precious snowflakes.”
Accusations of being snowflakes, entitled, whiners and slackers have constantly been leveled at our nation’s young adults. They’ve even been described as “the lamest generation.” But the attacks on millennials by those on the right have been especially vicious. Back in 2015 Breitbart ran “7 Reasons Millennials are the Worst Generation.”
The right-wing attacks on millennials aren’t just vicious; they are old and tired. In fact, Trump supporter Bill O’Reilly gets credit for being at the forefront of these assaults. Well before his recent scandal, O’Reilly had trouble attracting the younger demographic to his caustic punditry. His viewers traditionally skew to seniors. Rather than think about why younger viewers didn’t want to tune in to his show, he referred to young viewers who preferred Jon Stewart as “stoned slackers.”
There is nothing new about older generations insulting the young; even the so-called Greatest Generation was criticized for being “over-mothered.” But the attacks on millennials do have a new edge and intensity to them. Political scientist Russell Dalton argues that millennial Americans may be the most disparaged generation of young people in our nation’s history.
But here’s the catch. In 2015, millennials became the largest voting bloc in the nation, overtaking baby boomers. And, despite the hype, millennials are voting. Even more, they are protesting and organizing and making their voices heard. And one thing they are saying is that they don’t like the Trump administration.
It isn’t news to say that the GOP has a millennial problem. In fact, millennials have long expressed disgust in the two-party system in general, but they have been especially wary of a Donald Trump administration. Leading up to the election, there was a sharp division between millennials of color and white millennials. Polls showed that 67 percent of black youth and 36 percent of Latino youth were “scared” of the possibility of a Trump presidency.
Despite the fact that the general myth is that millennials are lazy, selfish and unengaged, overall turnout in the 2016 election was slightly higher than 2012. And overall political engagement by millennials is higher than we have seen for young people in decades. Unsurprisingly, most of the millennials who voted for Trump were white. While Trump drew more millennials than had been expected, he still only won one-third of young voters.
But those few millennials who did support Trump are turning on him. A new study by GenForward shows that 57 percent of millennials see Trump’s presidency as illegitimate, including about three-quarters of blacks and large majorities of Latinos and Asians.
Overall, only 22 percent of young adults approve of the job Trump is doing as president, while 62 percent disapprove. GenForward polls further show that across all racial and ethnic groups the majority of millennials disapprove of Trump. With 71 percent of African-Americans and even 55 percent of whites against him. They are overwhelmingly negative on his policies and his demeanor.
Those who study millennials knew that even if Trump pulled out a win in 2016 “his insular appeal to his preponderantly white coalition has exposed the party to a clear long-term risk.” As the Atlantic reported before the 2016 vote, “Win or lose, all evidence suggests Trump is further alienating a Millennial generation that is already cool to the GOP — and is poised to become the electorate’s largest cohort in 2020.”
During the campaign Trump tried to appeal to millennials by running an ad with his kids. It was a stunning failure.
The ad featured a photo of his three millennial-aged children and suggested that a vote for Trump was a vote to change the system. The response to the ad offered the Trump team a special dose of millennial snark when it turned into the meme of the week. Jokes compared the Trumps to “Batman v Superman,” “Children of the Corn,” “The Purge,” “American Psycho, “Harry Potter” antagonist Draco Malfoy and many other pop culture references.
Just remember all the good the purge does. #MillennialsForTrump #StudentsForTrump #PurgersForTrump pic.twitter.com/VjDmd1MS1v
— Adam @ SWCO (@AdamFrazier) September 3, 2016
Ivanka has also failed to appeal to our nation’s young adults. Millennials, especially females, were supposed by wooed by Ivanka Trump, who was repeatedly billed as the moderate who could keep her dad in check. That, of course, was before it became clear that she doesn’t even understand what the word “complicit” means.
A new poll shows that only 21 percent of young women have a favorable view of Ivanka and only 32 percent of millennial males like her. She draws approval from only 9 percent of millennial women who identify as Democrats.
While that survey indicated that young women are basically unhappy with the whole Trump team, the low numbers for Ivanka suggest that the millennial demographic isn’t buying the idea that she supports issues that matter to them: “If these women continue to have a negative impression of her, Ivanka may need to rethink her strategy for convincing them that she is serious about her mission of empowerment.”
What may be more astonishing is the idea that anyone ever thought that Ivanka could be a champion for working women. Millennials have a special knack for seeing through bullshit and their one common personality trait is skepticism. So it is little surprise that they don’t trust the Trump team and they see through the Ivanka artifice.