Once, anti-establishment youth disillusioned with mainstream politics headed left. Now increasing numbers are tilting right. Why?

Josh is 24 years old and works as a carer. It’s not easy work, but he prefers it to his old job in a supermarket: most of his clients are elderly and “just want someone there with them, because they’re lonely”. In his spare time Josh used to be into boxing. But lately he’s got into politics instead.

Like many of his gen Z contemporaries, he’s thoroughly disillusioned with the mainstream kind. “The two parties that have been in power for 100-plus years have done nothing. The economy’s a mess,” he scoffs. But if he sounds like the kind of anti-establishment young person who once rallied to the radical left, Josh’s frustration has taken him in another direction. An ardent leaver in his teens, who backed Boris Johnson in 2019, he now belongs to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.

  • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I really don’t get these people. This guy sounds and looks as phoney as they come. How dumb do you have to be to fall for his act?

    • ThomasCrappersGhost@feddit.uk
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      21 hours ago

      Same. I keep saying the right wing Conservatives have failed us, so why do you think the even more right wing Reform will be any better?

      We need proper left representation, but we need a media that isn’t pushing for right wing policies.

    • BOFH@feddit.uk
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      22 hours ago

      I don’t ’get these people’ either. But clearly, popularist politicians everywhere do get them. All their lives they’ve heard promises from the ‘traditional’ left and right wing parties that have made little impact on their daily lives that they can see. They’re still in a terrible job, still hearing the media rattling on about how terrible things are, etc.

      So they’re ripe for the taking when someone comes along, tells them that the promises they heard from others are trash, that this new person knows who or what is really to blame, and luckily. It’s a group that’s easy to scapegoat and ‘other’.

      • davesmith@feddit.uk
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        21 hours ago

        The average Reform voter’s unhappiness isn’t a matter of ‘scapegoating an other’ over a media construct.

        The consequences of the electorate refusing to accept this will only cause Reform’s voter base will grow.

        • BOFH@feddit.uk
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          21 hours ago

          That’s valid. I vastly simplified things I know, and there’s lots I don’t understand about it. People want to feel heard and they aren’t getting that from most of the traditional political parties.

          I’ve voted both Labour and (in the past) conservative in my time and I think both parties are currently guilty of taking a lot of things and a lot of people for granted who expect better.

    • TheEmpireStrikesDak@thelemmy.club
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      1 day ago

      They provide simple answers to their problems. Easy scapegoats. My ex thought highly of Farridge, Yaxley Lenton, etc. He thought Trump wasn’t really racist, but was playing some kind of 4D chess to get the racist vote so he could drain the swamp.

      My ex was pretty intelligent when it came to other things, but he fell for every lie coming out these grifters’ mouths.

      One thing that’s significant: he still uses Facebook. Social media amplifes the right. It’s weird how on a completely non political video in incognito mode, YouTube will dish up right wing videos. You can watch one seemingly innocuous video and the next thing, you’ll get flooded with more and more extreme right content and before you know it, you’re far right.

      It’s clear that my ex, and another colleague I had who’s into the right, parrot the same talking points they see on twitter and Facebook (classic one was parroting Musk’s civil war predictions during the Southport riots). They’re both anti establishment, without realising the people they admire ARE as establishment as they get.