[[{“value”:”

Many young people in the northern English cities of Liverpool and Manchester say they feel disillusioned by politics.

As the flag of a British workers union flapped behind him on a blustery June morning, Liam Kehoe was on strike with colleagues outside Royal Liverpool University Hospital, demanding better pay for porters, cleaners and catering staff. Their wages have failed to keep up with the surge in the cost of living, and many said they were living paycheck to paycheck.

Mr. Kehoe, 26, serves food in the hospital. On Thursday, the day of Britain’s general election, he plans to vote for the center-left Labour Party because of the economic situation and the crumbling state of the National Health Service, he said.

Thinking of the life that his parents built on salaries earned as a nurse and a truck driver, Mr. Kehoe says that young people have been left with far worse prospects after 14 years of a Conservative-led government. “If you go back 30 years ago, houses were a bit more affordable, life was a little bit easier,” he said. “Nowadays, it’s like you can’t afford anything.”

Polls suggest more than half of voters under 35 plan to vote for Labour on Thursday, compared with 27 percent of voters over 65. While the gap between young and old in politics is not new, the extent of the split in Britain in recent years is exceptional, with support for the governing Conservative Party dropping sharply in all but the oldest age group, according to recent polls.

Image

Liam Kehoe, right, took part in a demonstration in June outside Royal Liverpool University Hospital, where he works, in Liverpool, England. Credit…Mary Turner for The New York Times

Before 2019, the major factor in whether people voted Conservative or Labour was income. More recently, “age has replaced class as the defining way in which people vote,” said Molly Broome, an economist with the Resolution Foundation, a British research institute.

How party support has changed since the 2019 election

Conservative party

Conservative support has dropped across the board, even among older voters who formed their base.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Labour party

Labour has gained support — except among young people, who are moving toward smaller parties, like the Greens.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Conservative party

Conservative support has dropped across the board, even among older voters who formed their base.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Labour party

Labour has gained support — except among young people, who are moving toward smaller parties, like the Greens.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Conservative party

Conservative support has dropped across the board, even among older voters who formed their base.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Labour party

Labour has gained support — except among young people, who are moving toward smaller parties, like the Greens.

Age

18 to 24

25 to 49

50 to 64

65+

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Vote share

Source: YouGov polling on June 10, 2024 and Dec. 17, 2019

By Josh Holder

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