
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Baby-boomers have dominated American politics since the 1990s, but this election may be their last stand. Shifting demographics do not favour Donald Trump, the boomer-in-chief. Younger Americans are more diverse, more educated, more likely to vote Democrat. Is the boomer era over?
We speak to William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, look back to what Barack Obama called the “psychodrama” of boomer politics, and ahead to what might replace it.
John Prideaux, The Economist's US editor, hosts with New York bureau chief Charlotte Howard, and Jon Fasman, Washington correspondent.
For access to The Economist’s print, digital and audio editions subscribe: economist.com/2020electionpod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By The Economist4.5
14081,408 ratings
Baby-boomers have dominated American politics since the 1990s, but this election may be their last stand. Shifting demographics do not favour Donald Trump, the boomer-in-chief. Younger Americans are more diverse, more educated, more likely to vote Democrat. Is the boomer era over?
We speak to William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, look back to what Barack Obama called the “psychodrama” of boomer politics, and ahead to what might replace it.
John Prideaux, The Economist's US editor, hosts with New York bureau chief Charlotte Howard, and Jon Fasman, Washington correspondent.
For access to The Economist’s print, digital and audio editions subscribe: economist.com/2020electionpod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

4,189 Listeners

920 Listeners

524 Listeners

608 Listeners

581 Listeners

365 Listeners

91 Listeners

711 Listeners

107 Listeners

224 Listeners

2,547 Listeners

46 Listeners

1,080 Listeners

140 Listeners

115 Listeners

102 Listeners

37 Listeners

447 Listeners

894 Listeners

366 Listeners

497 Listeners

78 Listeners

138 Listeners

72 Listeners

100 Listeners

246 Listeners