As Democratic voters say their party needs to change and young voters grow more skeptical of traditional party politics, a crop of candidates in their 20s and 30s is stepping in to challenge older Democrats for their seats in Congress.
The prim challengers stepping up against veteran Democrats in recent months are emphasizing young-voter issues and railing against the ways they feel the Democratic Party has failed — from how it’s pushed back on President Donald Trump’s early actions to addressing the rising cost of living.
Saikat Chakrabarti, a 39-year-old former chief of staff for Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, launched a bid in early Febru for Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s House seat in California. Last month, 26-year-old social media star Kat Abughazaleh jumped into the race for veteran Illinois Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s seat. Since then, a handful of other new faces have entered the midterm arena against entrenched incumbents, with Jake Rakov, 37, challenging his old boss, Rep. Brad Sherman, in California and rge Hornedo, 34, launching a challenge against nine-term Rep. Andre Carson in Indiana’s 7th District.
The local calls for change come as the party reached an all-time low in popularity in the most recent national NBC News poll, with almost two-thirds of Democrats saying they want congressional Democrats to fight rather than compromise, even at the risk of not getting things done.
Young Democratic voters interviewed by NBC News echoed these views, saying they’re “disappointed” by a lack of action from Democrats. Some said they see the party’s messaging as “redundant” and think party leaders aren’t representing the issues affecting younger generations, with the rising cost of living getting frequent mention.
“They’re not listening to what their voters want, and it’s just backfiring on them,” said Sean Connor, a college student from Charlotte, North Carolina.
Connor said he sees a lack of “real leadership” from Democrats but noted efforts from Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders to rally anti-Trump crowds as successful in mobilizing voters.
“Besides AOC, there’s not a lot of young people in Congress to feel represented,” Connor said. “I feel like the people controlling my life and controlling our government, they’re decades behind what we really need.”
Darcy McMillan, a 25-year-old nursing student from Raleigh, North Carolina, said her ideal candidate would be someone younger who understands “what normal people are going through,” which she said is a divergence from the representatives she’s seen in Congress.
“A lot of them are so out of touch, or 80 years old,” said McMillan. “So someone who’s younger, empathetic, has lived lives similar enough to us that they get it. Because I don’t feel like I can relate to a lot of representatives.”
“They keep saying, ‘We hear you, we see you,’” said Rebecca, a 24-year-old voter from East Brunswick, New Jersey, who declined to share her last name. “But I haven’t seen them condemn what Trump is doing, and the fact that his policies are making it more expensive to live in the United States. I haven’t seen anyone say, ‘This is what we’re planning to do or bring up instead.’”