- Fri Jul 18, 2025 3:11 pm
#93006
I nicked this from a guy called Jack Dart on The Fleecebook. It is sound.
Let’s Talk About the Ridiculous Arguments Against Giving 16 and 17 Year-Olds the Vote.
The right is in meltdown over plans to allow 16 and 17-year-olds to vote by the next general election. Reform calls it a cynical left-wing power grab. The usual suspects in the press warn of “childish” voters flooding polling stations with TikTok slogans. The Tories complain because they know exactly who this generation is likely to vote against.
Let’s break it down, because none of their arguments stand up to scrutiny.
“They’re not mature enough.”
This is their go-to line. The same people who think 16-year-olds are responsible enough to pay tax, join the army and work full time suddenly insist they cannot tick a box on a ballot paper. We trust them with employment, exams that shape their futures and, in some cases, weapons. Democracy is hardly more dangerous. They are not worried about maturity, they are worried about who these young voters will choose.
“It’s just a political stunt to help Labour.”
Labour may benefit, but that does not make it wrong. That is democracy. If your policies do not appeal to young people, the solution is not to bar them from voting, it is to offer something better. Scotland and Wales already let 16-year-olds vote in local and devolved elections. If this is a coup, it happened years ago and democracy survived.
“They don’t know enough about politics.”
Neither do plenty of adults. That is not a reason to deny the vote. Studies show that people who start voting early are more likely to stay engaged for life. We do not quiz 45-year-olds before they vote or ban people who skip manifestos. Voting is a right. If you pay into the system, you deserve a say.
“It will distort the electorate.”
No, it will expand it. Roughly 1.5 million new voters will join the register. That is participation, not distortion. If your party is terrified of a fuller electorate, your platform is the problem.
“They will just follow social-media trends.”
This is rich from movements that thrive on memes and YouTube rants. Trump, Farage and Reform have all relied on digital platforms to radicalise and recruit. Spare us the concern about influencers.
Yes, we do need to keep our eyes open. Reform and other far-right actors are already active in the online spaces young men inhabit. They are using gaming platforms, podcasts and social media to spread conspiracy, anti-migrant rhetoric and hard-right ideology. We know how that pipeline works. We have seen what it leads to. So yes, we need to watch it closely, invest in education, and build credible alternatives to fill the vacuum. But that is not a reason to keep young people locked out of the democratic process. It is a reason to bring them in, give them a stake, and start listening to them before the far right does it for us.
Let’s talk about Brexit.
One of the most consequential political decisions in modern British history was taken without input from the very people it would affect most. Brexit was forced through by a narrow margin, with lies on the side of buses, foreign interference, and no coherent plan. It cut off opportunities, gutted freedom of movement, wrecked trade links and decimated entire industries, and young people had no vote on it. Millions of 16 and 17-year-olds were told they were too immature to decide their future, while pensioners who would not live with the consequences were courted like royalty. If this country can drag an entire generation out of Europe against their will, it can damn well let them have a say in what happens next.
This generation is politically aware, angry and ready for a voice. They have grown up through austerity, climate crisis, lockdowns, rising rent and stagnant wages. They have watched older generations make decisions that shape futures they will have to live with. Giving them the vote is not radical, it is overdue.
If 16 and 17-year-olds leaned right, Reform and the Tories would rush to lower the voting age. This is not about principle, it is about power. They fear a generation that has seen through their nonsense.
The vote at 16 is basic democratic fairness. If you can pay tax and serve your country, you should have a say in how it is run. If that makes certain politicians uncomfortable, good. That is how democracy stays healthy.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.