WASHINGTON -- Principled or calculating or a bit of both,
President Obama's choice on gay marriage is a bet on the political future -- a
wager on the views and values of the millennial generation making its long
march through American institutions.
It is a group in which Obama still has broad support, but
no longer inspires as he once did. "The Obama generation," says
Brookings scholar William Galston, "lasted about five years." Those
ages 18 to 24 are less enthusiastic about Obama than those ages 25 to 29. Since
2008, political engagement among millennials has weakened, cynicism toward
government officials has increased and skepticism about the value of political
involvement has gone up.
Obama's gay-marriage shift is not likely to change this
dramatically. In a recent survey by Harvard's Institute on Politics, 58 percent
of millennials cited jobs and the economy as their issue of top concern. No
other topic broke single digits, and cultural issues appeared hardly at all.
But looking beyond a single election, it is undeniable
that America is in the midst of a large, consequential shift in the attitudes
of the rising generation. A recent poll by the Public Religion Research
Institute and the Berkley Center at Georgetown University found millennials to
be less religiously affiliated than their parents. A majority thinks that
government "is getting too involved in the issue of morality." While
accepting that Christianity "has good values and principles,"
millennials often describe it as "judgmental,"
"hypocritical" and "anti-gay."
The pace of these changes is so rapid that sociologists
are having a hard time keeping up. In the 2006 data sample that informed the
first edition of Robert Putnam and David Campbell's indispensable
"American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us," 25 percent of
18- to 29-year-olds described their religious preference as "none."
The result of the 2011 sample, printed in the second edition, was 33 percent.
In five years, support for gay marriage in that age group went from 48 percent
to 60 percent. Those describing premarital sex as "never wrong" went
from 34 percent to 44 percent.
If history is any guide, millennial attitudes will grow
more conservative over time, at least in some areas. Those who become fathers
to daughters will be less inclined to believe that premarital sex is
"never" wrong. But the baseline of social liberalism is starting
higher than in previous generations, with major political consequences as this
cohort works it way through the decades.
It is easy to infer that the Republican Party -- as the
more religious and culturally conservative party -- is doomed in the long run.
But long-term political trends don't apply that neatly. America is not becoming
Sweden -- though Vermont tries its best. Many millennials hold traditional
moral views, as well as politically conservative ones. (A solid majority
believes that government has gotten bigger because it has done "things
that people should do for themselves.") Ideology will continue to vary
greatly by region. The defining issues of one decade can be overwhelmed or
invisible in the next.
But Republicans and conservatives will be forced to make
some adjustments over time.
The millennial shift will influence the way conservatives
argue. The tone of Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry and Rick Santorum on social
issues during the recent primary season -- itself a throwback to the early days
of the religious right -- will not be an option. Republican rhetoric will need
to be oriented toward shared moral aspiration instead of harsh judgment.
This trend will influence the coalitions that Republicans
build. It will make less and less sense to aggressively alienate groups of
voters holding socially conservative values -- Latinos in particular -- based
on other issues. Lost ground among younger, unmarried voters will need to be
gained somewhere.
And the generational shift will inevitably influence the
fights conservatives choose to make. Even a significant portion of millennials
who regard homosexuality as immoral support gay marriage out of a commitment to
pluralism. And arguments in favor of pluralism have a tremendous advantage in
America. In much of the country, social conservatives may need to choose a more
defensible political line -- the protection of individual and institutional
conscience rights for those who disagree with gay marriage. It is also a
commitment of genuine pluralism to allow those with differing moral beliefs to
associate in institutions that reflect their convictions.
The immediate political influence of cultural debates is
overestimated. But the impact of a generational shift in cultural attitudes is
only beginning.
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