Teens for Trump? Republicans eye gains among US youth

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Mr Matthew Paley is eager to cast his first-ever presidential ballot for Donald Trump.

Mr Matthew Paley, 19, is eager to cast his first-ever presidential ballot for Donald Trump.

PHOTO: AFP

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Caden Schaefer-Rose will only just be 18 by the time of November’s US election, but he is determined to cast his very first presidential vote – for Donald Trump.

The high school student is among a growing number of teens defying liberal stereotypes of America’s youngest voters and hopping aboard the Trump train.

“I feel like he reflects a lot of my personal values,” Caden, wearing mirrored sunglasses, said at the Youth VoteFest event on July 17 near the Republican National Convention.

He first became aware of Trump in 2016, seeing him on TV during that year’s raucous campaign. Other young voters at the event said their first memory of Trump was seeing his cameo in Home Alone 2, or as a brash boss in TV’s The Apprentice.

“I kind of just connected with him,” Caden said. “I was only eight years old at the time, but I could see that he was someone I could eventually look up to.”

Same with Mr Matthew Paley, a 19-year-old from New Jersey who was playing the lawn game cornhole outside the Republican convention arena.

He met his idol Trump – “very nice dude!” – recently in Florida and fully backs the billionaire as he seeks a White House comeback.

“Honestly, in the beginning... I just liked Trump because I thought he was hilarious,” Mr Paley said.

“Then once I started doing my research, I was like ‘Oh wow, all right’.”

Mr Paley said he embraces the same “core conservative values” as Trump, including gun rights.

“And I love that he has such a strong backbone and fights for what he believes in.”

America’s youth have traditionally voted Democratic, and for now, they largely still do. But Republicans insist a shift is afoot.

Pew Research shows that in 2016, voters under 30 supported the Democratic Party ticket by a 30-point margin. By 2020, that advantage had shrunk to 24 points.

The youngest voters, in particular, are pivotal, as studies show college student voting is rising – and Republicans are courting them like never before.

Trump’s newly announced running mate,

Senator J.D. Vance

, is just 39 years old – 20 years younger than Vice-President Kamala Harris.

The party invited Ms Amber Rose, a social media influencer with 24 million followers on Instagram, to address the convention, where she endorsed Trump on July 15.

In a bid to attract young black voters, rapper Forgiato Blow made an appearance.

Mr Charlie Kirk, who founded the youth-oriented grassroots conservative group Turning Point USA when he was just 18, took the convention stage this week, claiming President Joe Biden’s message to Gen Z is to “limit your dreams (and) be content with less”.

Mr Charlie Kirk, executive director of Turning Point USA, speaking during the first day of the 2024 Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 15.

PHOTO: AFP

“Donald Trump refuses to accept this fake, pathetic, mutilated version of the American dream,” Mr Kirk, 30, said to huge applause.

“This is why young men are the most conservative that they have been in 50 years.”

Xavier Starks, an African-American high school student in Wisconsin who turns 18 in August, said he is considering voting for Trump.

“I feel like Trump did do good things, but the way he’s trying to run and saying ‘I’m a dictator’, and how he’s going to conduct himself, I don’t know about that,” Xavier said at the youth symposium.

The fact that a convicted felon will be on the ballot is “pretty insane”, he said. But Mr Biden, 81, is “so old”.

High school student Xavier Starks is waffling between incumbent Democrat Joe Biden and Republican challenger Donald Trump.

PHOTO: AFP

Well-informed young conservatives cite America’s soaring national debt, shrinking home ownership prospects, bloated interest rates and illegal immigration as reasons to back Trump.

Former US senator Heidi Heitkamp, who now heads the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics that coordinated the VoteFest, said she recognises why young Americans might tune out to the two oldest-ever presidential nominees.

She said: “I think they’re looking at these two candidates and saying: ‘Do they really understand what my concerns are?’

“I don’t think there’s been a lot of clarity on what that future looks like for young people.” AFP

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