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Opinion

Hey Canada! It's Your Future Calling; We Need to Talk

Young people have our own political visions that extend beyond the voting booth.

Tari Ajadi 28 Oct 2015Discourse Media

Tari Ajadi is an editor at Discourse Media, a recent graduate of Quest University Canada and the founding editor-in-chief of The Mark student newspaper.

[Editor’s note: What do young people want Canada to be? That's what student reporters from across the country set out to find over at Possible Canadas -- a journalism project by Discourse Media launched this week. The Tyee will host a few of these student-led visions over the coming weeks.]

Dear Canada,

We have a problem. Our political discourse is poisoned.

Whether you're basking in a victorious post-election glow or wallowing in its shadow, we cannot forget just how awful the 42nd general election campaign was. This was an election during which wedge politics was the politics. It was an election during which populist rhetoric morphed into violence on the street.

Perhaps worst of all, it was the kind of election where we largely ignored the most important issues in favour of tax credits for tiny groups of people.

All the campaigns used these tactics. In fact, those tactics seem to be the one thing the parties agreed on.

We need to find a way out of this mess. The new government will lead Canada through its 150th birthday in 2017. What better way to celebrate than to rethink how we discuss our future?

Too often we leave entire groups out of national conversations. One perspective obviously missing from the campaign discourse? The stewards of this future Canada.

Paying attention

We stereotype young Canadians as cynical, self-centred and disengaged. The media made much of the 2011 federal election's terrible youth voter turnout rate and the trajectory of youth voting engagement. Some have even called for Canada to become more like North Korea and institute mandatory voting to stimulate youth engagement. Our politicians and our media are sending us a clear message: youth do not care about the future of this country, so why consult them?

It's a wonder then, that 82 per cent of young Canadians are optimistic about the future. It's curious too that youth in Canada consistently have, according to non-partisan charity Samara Canada, higher rates of participation in civic life outside of the voting booth.

The evidence shows that the common wisdom about youth should be reversed -- it is politicians who ignore youth, and not the other way around. It turns out that only 55 per cent of young people surveyed by Samara had been contacted by politicians in a non-election year, as opposed to 75 per cent of those 56 and older.

Ilona Dougherty, youth engagement expert and co-founder of Apathy is Boring, attributes the lack of contact to calculated political strategy. "Campaigns have a 'weak supporter' to 'strong supporter' continuum that doesn't often include unlikely voters. Moving someone from not voting to being a supporter isn't a dynamic that really happens, and as a result, young people get left out of the picture," she said.

Young Canadians' absence in our political dialogue means that the things we value aren't put on the national agenda. According to the Broadbent Institute's Millennial Dialogue report, young Canadians value health, happiness, family, equality and freedom of speech. We value meaningful and sustainable societies and communities, no matter where we fall on the political spectrum.

None of the discussions in this election addressed those concerns in any meaningful way. Media reinforced narrow margins of discourse with minute-by-minute polling data and microtargeting that is so often condescending to young audiences.

"It's insulting to assume that all young people care about is marijuana, for example," Dougherty notes. "Polls about what young people care about this second aren't an accurate reflection of the issues they want to talk about in the long-term."

We are in danger of creating a nation that is not designed with our voices or our intentions as part of the project. That is a problem for everyone, young and old.

Whose table? Our table!

We need to shift the discourse entirely. Young Canadians don't just want a seat at the table. To paraphrase Dougherty, we need to scrap the table and start anew. What would a Canada where young people directed the national discourse look like?

This means young people showing up at the polls, but it also means far more. It means our politicians prioritizing conversations about what young people find meaningful. It means removing the patronizing frame of "youth issues" to describe the valid and complex concerns that young Canadians have about the state of our nation. It means that we celebrate civic activities that young Canadians are already engaging in as a starting point for leadership. An overview of youth-led social change movements in Canada over 35 years shows that initiatives like civic youth advisory councils allow young Canadians to impact and influence decision-making on a national and international scale.

If we want to rebuild "our table," it will mean working together to hold an honest, multigenerational conversation about what the future of this country looks like. What do we want Canada to be?

That's the question at the heart of Possible Canadas. Over the next few weeks 10 student journalists from across Western Canada will tackle questions formed by consulting young Canadians at campuses across the region about what matters to them.

These journalists ventured out into their communities and interviewed as many students as they could find. They took that information and ran with it, pursuing forward-looking perspectives on issues that range from Aboriginal sovereignty to climate change to building inclusive communities. They designed the scope and aim of this project. Far from "youth issues," these articles are about our nation's most important conversations.

We want these conversations to have true impact. We want these issues debated in the halls of power. So, Prime Minister-designate Trudeau, and the rest of the newly-elected government MPs: read these articles. Work with us to develop a cohesive, meaningful way to allow youth to drive this country forward. Let young Canadians act as the stewards we know we can be, and help us to create a better vision for this nation's future.

To the rest of the nation, young and old, we need your voices here too. We want you to engage, want you to debate with and against us. Go to PossibleCanadas.ca to find out how.

Let's get to work.

Possible Canadas is funded by the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation. Its support does not imply endorsement of the views represented.  [Tyee]

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