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Subject:
From:
Gabriel Hillel <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Commission email for Raemi Eagle-Glenn <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 2 Nov 2022 07:40:49 -0400
Content-Type:
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*Day 113: Florida Freedom Summer of 2024: Meet Generation Z’s Celebrity
Politician*
[image: image.png]


[image: Maxwell Frost: Gen Z candidate will win Democratic nomination in
Florida's 10th District, CNN projects | CNN Politics]

Maxwell Frost, 25 years old, plays the drums, but that hardly is what he is
known for this year. Democrats are assured of one feel-good moment on
election night next week, when Frost becomes the first GenZ member elected
to the U.S. Congress.

The photo says much about who he is and who he represents.  Frost is a
Afro-Cuban with a following of like-minded people his age who are old
enough to vote—and to run for political office.  What he and GenZ bring to
politics is an awareness and consciousness of issues of less direct
personal concern to older people—in particular, climate change, gun
violence, personal identification and control of their own bodies.

The public first met them in 2017, when survivors of the mass shooting at
Parkland High School, in Florida, joined particularly with young people
familiar with gun violence in Chicago, to create the national March for Our
Lives, in Washington, D.C., and in major cities around the nation.

GenZ, the generation of zoomers, generally born between mid-1990s to the
early 2010s, has been visible everywhere in 2022  particularly on campuses
in protests,  Yesterday, on Nov. 1, 2022, young people spoke against
approving Ben Sasse as the new president of the University of Florida.  The
only public commentor supporting Sasse was an alum.  Outside, students
matched in protest, and then listened respectfully to Dr. Paul Ortiz,
history professor and director of the UF Oral History Project, explain why
Dr. Sasse wasn’t qualified to be UF president.

Perhaps the clearest visible line between the generation in power and GenZ
in my home state of Florida came during this exchange:

Frost confronted Florida Governor Ron DeSantis during an interview over gun
violence within the state. Security ejected Frost, with DeSantis
taunting,       *"Nobody wants to hear from you."* Frost then turned the
Governor's words into a rallying cry for his supporters.
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://advocatechannel.com/florida-progressive-could-become-first-gen-z-member-of-congress__;!!KOmxaIYkRmNA0A!QE3yKEKa_0UZKLNPUv6whlf9jucxYJtO4rgcmGKGdKgzhZjVyexuuYNK3470QOUEGtNVsEiOckLa6H2miQd-SyBsMZo$ 

https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://advocatechannel.com/florida-progressive-could-become-first-gen-z-member-of-congress__;!!KOmxaIYkRmNA0A!QE3yKEKa_0UZKLNPUv6whlf9jucxYJtO4rgcmGKGdKgzhZjVyexuuYNK3470QOUEGtNVsEiOckLa6H2miQd-SyBsMZo$ 

Frost won the Democratic primary in a black Congressional district
previously represented by U.S. Rep. Val Demings (D-FL).  She chose to run
for the U.S. Senate.  In the primary for her seat, Frost finished first,
ahead of nine, including well-known present and past office holders.

But that victory resulted in the emergence of an issue discomforting to
those who would like to see the rebirth of the old coalition which
constituted the base of the Democratic party for years, in the 1960s and
1970s, until 1980 when “Reagan Democrats” emerged among working class
whites.

There is little sign that older blacks are willing to work with young
politicians, even black ones.  Frost fortunately has been given the public
support of black House majority whip, U.S. Rep. James Cliburn (D-S.C.)
Congressman Cliburn was credited with turning the presidential primary in
President Joe Biden’s favor by endorsing him.

Front also has Latino support, most visibly recently from composer/lyricist
Lin Manuel Miranda, the creator of the hit musical *Hamilton.*  Again,
however, older Latinos, especially Cubans, still vote Republican in
sufficient numbers to favor GOP candidates.

Republicans however don’t have to worry about Frost running for the U.S.
Senate, until 2028 when he turns 30, or the U.S. presidency, until 3032,
when he will be 35.  Still conservatives have reason for concern.

Frost precisely because of his youth, is being talked about as the next
Obama, the next JFK , the next FDR.  His admirers have included young
people who were more likely to care more about  Frank Sinatra, or Elvis  or
the Beatles in prior generations. Will it be enough to convince GenZ to
vote in greater numbes than earlier generations of young people when they
were 18-25, now that they now have one of their own to address the issues?  *
Can Frost be persuaded to advocate for a Florida Freedom Summer of 2024,
when he runs again for Congress in that year?*

Gabriel Hillel

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