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The millennial electoral maps might give you hope—but our generation has a lot of work to do

There was significantly less voter turnout among millennials this year than in 2012.

 

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Posted on Nov 9, 2016   Updated on May 25, 2021, 3:06 pm CDT

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BY EMMA LORD

Listen, millennials. We need to talk. This morning you may be waking up to the images of the millennial electoral maps on your Twitter feed, and undoubtedly you will react to them the way that I did at first: Anger. Outrage. Maybe a little bit of pride. Because if you look at the projection of how the election would have turned out if millennials had been in charge of the vote, Hillary Clinton would have won the presidency by a landslide.

By this virtue, it might seem incredibly easy to blame the older generations for putting us in the position we are in right now — namely, having Donald Trump as the president-elect of the United States. After all, it’s their votes that screwed with our perfect millennial maps again, isn’t it? In that sense, this is just one more mess the Baby Boomers have left for us to clean up in their wake; we are inheriting this presidency the same way we inherited the bad economy, inherited an impossible job market, and inherited the ability to go dead in the eyes and nod as your grandparents say something vaguely racist at the Thanksgiving dinner table.

Oh, my friends. If only it were that simple.

These images in the aftermath of the election, provided by an interactive election map on Survey Monkey, are a handy tool to give you an overview of how the race would be different depending on whether certain populations voted on their own. And yes, it paints millennials a pretty picture of hope for the future; but here’s the picture it didn’t paint: Millennials didn’t show up to vote.

Yeah, yeah — plenty of us did. But it wasn’t enough. While the numbers aren’t firm yet as the country is still gathering demographics data, this much we do know: We saw significant less millennial voter turnout in 2016 than we did for Obama in 2012. That means that the largest and most influential generation — a generation that is certainly larger now than it was four years ago — collectively dropped the ball.

What’s worse is that we saw this coming. There were countless initiatives inspiring millennials to vote; registering was made more accessible than ever on social media; Beyoncé and Lady Gaga and every liberal celebrity under the sun did their damnedest to get us to the polls. Quartz published an article with a now haunting headline: “Lazy millennial voters could hand Trump the US presidency.

Look at those maps and make no mistake, millennials: We did.

It is, quite frankly, terrifying that we are looking at Millennial electoral maps like this with “hope for the future”; if we had all done our civic duty, that future would have been today.

If you think those lost votes don’t matter, consider this: Millennials already outnumber Baby Boomers, and have more power in the electorate than they do. Sure, it was the Baby Boomers’ votes that influenced this election — but only because we weren’t there to stop them. It is, quite frankly, terrifying that we are looking at millennial electoral maps like this with “hope for the future”; if we had all done our civic duty, that future would have been today.

We can yell at swing states like Florida to do better. We can yell at third party “protest” voters who tilted this election to do better. We can kick and yell and scream for the next four years — and god, I hope that we do — for the man who is to be our next president of the United States to do better.

But if we don’t exercise our civic duty to vote — if we don’t exercise this fundamental, insane, amazing right that we are all so lucky to have in 2016 — we don’t deserve better. We deserve what we got. And what we got was Donald Trump.

Those of us who didn’t vote — maybe you thought you were safe. Maybe you felt ambivalent. Maybe you were selfish enough to think that because the outcome of the election didn’t directly affect you, that your vote didn’t matter. But watch what happens in the next few years. Watch how very, very real the consequences of our inaction are. And four years from now, when we have a chance to fix this mess, for the love of all that is good and right and just in this world: VOTE.

This story originally appeared on Bustle and has been republished with permission.

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*First Published: Nov 9, 2016, 3:32 pm CST