Brookings’ senior fellows Stuart Butler and Molly Reynolds discuss debt and climate change with Eric T. Harris Communications Director for Rep.Jimmy Gomez, Layla Zaidane, COO, Millennial Action Project; Alec Tyson from the Pew Research Center, and Nat Ken

More and more millennials are taking to the streets to demand action on climate change, but not action on America’s national debt and deficits — another major long-term problem that carries enormous risks to future generations. What’s behind the difference in millennial attitudes towards these two threats, and how do we get younger generations of Americans to demand long-term fiscal solvency?

 

On October 22, the Brookings Institution and the Millennial Action Project (MAP) explored this paradox by reviewing generational differences in attitudes to the challenges of climate change and national debt and deficits. Both discussed with scholars and Millennial members of congress survey evidence and techniques for engaging millennials on major issues, and the lessons for policymakers, journalists, and others seeking to generate support among younger Americans for tackling big, long-term problems.

 

Join the conversation on Twitter using #MobilizingMillennials

 

Photo Credit: Sharon Farmer

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Uploaded on December 23, 2019
Taken on October 22, 2019