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Zenab Short visits a college in Oxfordshire to gauge teenagers' views of the general election. Does apathy or activisim reign?

Wednesday 27 April 2005 00:00

There are widespread concerns that we could be heading for a record low turnout in this election. Young people are particularly thought to be turned off by the tone of political debate and by a sense of estrangement from parliamentary processes. But is this just a clichŽ? Could it be that young people are no more or less interested in the poll than older people?

Matthew

I'm not interested in the elections becaues Labour is bound to get in again.  I don't trust Tony Blair because of the lies he told about Iraq, so I think it's unfair that Labour will win, but none of the other parties are any better than them.  The Conversatives and Liberal Democrats contradict and fight each other for the fun of it.

And why did the government waste so much time of the fox hunting issue, when there are more important needs the nation has?  I'm really concerned about safety, about being able to walk down the street without being harassed.  The government should be tackling hooliganism, not minority things like hunting.

James 

I would vote Conservative if I was 18. I'm fed up with Blair - he does whatever George Bush wants. It's not that I particularly like Michael Howard; it's just that I think he has a better chance of beating Labour than the Liberal Democrats do, because they will never win. I don't watch the news or read a paper, so I don't know what the main parties' policies are.

Sasha 

I didn't  know there was going to be an election, but it's irrelevant to me anyway because I'm not interested. Politicians don't do enough to get their views over to people my age, because they don't care about us. Young people like me get a bad press. We are seen as violent and as drinkers; no one ever talks about the positive things teenagers do. Maybe politics should be a compulsory subject in school.

Amy  

I'm really interested in the election. In two years, I will be able to vote, so what's going on now will affect my future - it's really important. I know about politics because I listen to Radio 4 and watch party political broadcasts. That makes me sort of unusual among people of my age!   What I hate about politicians is the point-scoring they go in for, always knocking each other. We do have an imperfect system but you have a duty to vote.

Moses 

The problem with teenagers is that we're self-absorbed and self-conscious. We live inside our heads, our minds on relationships all the time, so politics doesn't interest us. The only thing I am worried about is that politicians want to cut back on immigration. That makes those of us who aren't native English feel uncomfortable. I also get angry about wars that we get involved in.

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