A new generation of Americans is preparing to head to the polls – Generation Z. Born after 1996, most members of this generation are not yet old enough to vote, but as the oldest among them turn 23 this year, about 8 million Gen-Zers will have turned 18 between the 2020 elections and 2022 midterm elections. And their political clout will continue to grow steadily in the coming years, as more and more of them reach voting age.

Unlike millennials, who came of age during the Great Recession, this new generation was in line to inherit a strong economy with record-low unemployment. That has all changed now as COVID-19 has reshaped the country’s social, political and economic landscape. That uncertain future has placed voting low on the priority list of some Gen-Zers.

This is the fourth of several Defender Network articles that are part of Solutions Journalism Network’s Advancing Democracy initiative. Solutions Journalism provides readers with research on solutions to current problems, where they are being enacted, the challenges and opportunities those solutions provide and how readers can be part of those solutions. The initiative calls on participating media outlets to produce articles focused on issues that are threats to U.S. democracy and provide readers with initiatives aimed at “advancing” democracy.

The Houston Defender

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