Abstract
Gen Z want the government to address the big structural problems: housing supply, inequality and climate
I often write about how younger Australians are carving out a different political identity from older generations. But the election result has reminded us of what cuts across age and sits in our national core. That deep-seated Aussie reaction: “yeah-nah, that’s a bit much” when things go too far. We’re allergic to imported bravado, anything too loud, too messianic. And, when pushed, we don’t shout – we shrug.
I often write about how younger Australians are carving out a different political identity from older generations. But the election result has reminded us of what cuts across age and sits in our national core. That deep-seated Aussie reaction: “yeah-nah, that’s a bit much” when things go too far. We’re allergic to imported bravado, anything too loud, too messianic. And, when pushed, we don’t shout – we shrug.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 3 |
Specialist publication | The Guardian |
Publication status | Published - 5 May 2025 |
Keywords
- Australian federal election 2025
- Australian Labor Party
- young voters
- Inequality
- housing affordability
- climate crisis