Not on Team Rishi or Team Keir? You’re not alone – the two-party political system is seriously alienating young women

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Not on Team Rishi or Team Keir? You’re not alone – the two-party political system is seriously alienating young women


All of this has left a lot of young women unsure of who to vote for. We spoke to three GLAMOUR readers to find out more.

Nina* (23), a shop owner based in London, tells me that she’s “sad and angry” about the state of UK politics and has been since before Brexit. She’s not a fan of the Conservatives and is alarmed by the “racism, corruption, and extreme far-right views across the party.”

“Every week I think, ‘This is as low as they will go’, and yet they get worse. I’m embarrassed for Britain as a country, the world thinks we are bananas, and I agree.”

Erin (30), a writer from North London, has previously voted Conservative but doesn’t align herself with any of the political parties. She describes those who use “Tory-bashing as an identity” to be reductive and irritating. However, she tells GLAMOUR, “In the past decade, it has become actually warranted.”

She cites Brexit as a pivotal factor in “exposing the lunacy of British politics” and points to “constant backstabbing and plotting and endless machinations in the Tory party in the service of maintaining power have taken over Westminster,” which has “infected other parties in [a] mad grab for power.”

“The whole thing seems to be slowly melting in front of our eyes.”

As for how she’ll be spending the next election? “Crying,” she says. “But probably voting Labour for the first time.”

Lisa (40), who works in the education sector in Manchester, grew up in a Labour household but is feeling conflicted about voting for them in the next general election.

After reading about Labour’s stance on housing and immigration, she feels that “the party’s values and views no longer mirror [her] own.”

Lisa is passionate about supporting the most vulnerable in our society, which she believes can be achieved by taxing the wealthiest. She wants the next government to tackle a wealth of issues, from climate change to the cost of living crisis – but are either of the main political parties up to the job?

“We are not kept by the government; they are kept by us.”

In their own ways, Nina, Erin and Lisa all feel disillusioned with the two-party system. Nina argues that the UK’s political system is too similar to the USA’s, arguing that countries with proportional representation tend to have “healthy competition to keep political parties in check.”

When it feels inevitable that either the Conservatives or Labour will triumph, voting for anyone else seems redundant. As Nina says, “I don’t want to vote Labour at all, but my vote for the Green Party is pretty meaningless as it stands.”

Lisa also feels a sense of helplessness in the face of our current political system: “I’d like to say I’d be brave and vote for the Green Party, who on the surface seem more aligned with my own values and views,” says Lisa. “However,” she continues, “I’m desperate to see the Tories out and know that realistically, tactfully voting is the best bet, which means voting Labour.”

For Erin, the two-party system perpetuates an unhelpful binary between “liberal lefties vs Tory scum,” which she describes as “unhelpful, childish and unsustainable.”

“There are heinous Tory policies, there are good Tory policies, there are brilliant Labour ideas, and there are not-so-brilliant ones – yet they can never work together to, I dunno, get shit done for the country,” she continues.

“We should be finding a middle ground here because we all live on the same sodding island, and no one is going to get anything done if we don’t.”

Apathy is a natural response to politics of late, and it’s something many of the people in power are banking on; it keeps them comfortable. But we are not a petri dish. We are not kept by the government; they are kept by us.

‘People power’ might feel like an outdated term, but it’s important to remember that we still have autonomy – and a vote. Perhaps it’s time we had a say in how our votes are counted.

For more from GLAMOUR’s Contributing Editor, Chloe Laws, follow her @chloegracelaws.





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