GenX Government leaders
Posted by tossaway-florida@reddit | GenX | View on Reddit | 31 comments
Is it weird that Boomers are still running the US with Millennials coming in behind them? I really thought you people were going to make the world a better place. Did we not because we're the "who gives a shit" generation? Was Alison right? Did our hearts die?
AdRadiant9379@reddit
Aren’t a lot of governors Gen X?
GenX-ModTeam@reddit
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S1159P@reddit
Gavin Newsom is
GenX-ModTeam@reddit
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LinuxLinus@reddit
Same thing happened with my dad's generation (the one between the Greatest Generation and Boomers). The only notable Silent Generation pol I can think of is McCain.
It might be cynicism, but I also think there just aren't that many of us.
GenX-ModTeam@reddit
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deleted_by_reddit@reddit
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GenX-ModTeam@reddit
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Big-Oven9455@reddit
There are GenX leaders out there. It's just the fringe take all the attention and we don't care about the spotlight as much.
Redsmoker37@reddit
Yeah, asswipes like Marco Rubio. Most of them totally suck.
GenX-ModTeam@reddit
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Fartina69@reddit
Meh
GenX-ModTeam@reddit
No Politics - Political posts or comments of any sort are not permitted. If you wish to have political discussions, you may do so on our other sub r/GenXPolitics.
Breaking this rule may result in bans, either temporary or permanent.
Before you make the claim: No, providing respite from political discussions does not infringe on your rights.
Also, this politics ban was put before the sub over a year ago, and members have spoken.
hold--the--line@reddit
OP- I am also baffled by this... though, I have no interest in running. Lol
whatsthis1901@reddit
Politicians are on the cusp of being insane or just insane. I think our generation is just more mellow. We do things quietly in our own way and don't feel the need to get sucked into that craziness. It's the politicians of our time who have a dead heart, not us. This includes politicians on both sides.
Artisan_Gardener@reddit
I'm GenX, and we hit the dot com bubble and the subprime real estate bubble. We had recessions and mass layoffs. We had very little opportunity to live the dream that every generation before us did. I struggled my entire adult life. That, and onerous student loans, with underemployment. We have been just struggling to keep our heads above water.
Working_Farmer9723@reddit
It’s the size of the generation. They are so large that they naturally bend the order to generally suit them. They will cling to power and advantage because that’s what people try to do. Then, when they are done and the money is spent, the Millennials will take over and do the same.
It’s not even nefarious; it just is. The size of the generation simply lends itself to this, as the size of GenX lends itself to being skipped over. GenX could never change the world because there aren’t enough GenX.
ted_anderson@reddit
I think we'll end up taking over government within the next 10-20 years as the millennials tap out. That's what's happening in my career field right now. I'm in construction and when I got into it some 15 years ago, they were going through the process where the millennials were having everything handed over to them by the boomers. And as they were dropping the ball and screwing up, they were choosing to quit in lieu of learning from their mistakes.
And so I'm not sure when this happened or how long I've been asleep but when I look up now, I notice that Gen X is running things. When I walk into the morning safety briefing with 500 other people, we're the ones running the show and setting the pace. I go into the smaller round-table meetings and everyone at the table knows what to sing next when I randomly sing out, "Conjunction junction...."
We'll be running this much sooner than you realize. There will be a BMX freestyle track on the grounds of the white house before the end of the next decade.
Sufficient_Stop8381@reddit
Only an insane narcissist would want that job. More of the booms and mills cup of tea.
auntieup@reddit
I don’t know anyone who wants to be responsible for this shit. Best we can do is survive it at this point.
Disastrous_Cat3912@reddit
Politics? Whatever.
59apache01@reddit
It might be because a lot of us don't give a rat's ass about anything.
The same thing can be said in a lot of corporate environments. The Boomers who haven't retired yet hold most of the leadership positions with a handful of Millennials either starting to take over or warming up in the bullpen. There are only one or two Gen X senior managers at my job. I had exactly one opportunity to possibly be considered for a senior management position. But, I saw it as a lot of extra headache and responsibility for not that much of an increase in pay. No thanks.
Dean-O_66@reddit
Whatever
scarlettskadi@reddit
We see it for the shit show it is and don’t want any of it.
Not our circus not our monkeys.
CardinaLiz4@reddit
Well it is our circus and monkeys, if we live here...how is it not?
MrBiscotti_75@reddit
I am kind of disappointed that our generation never had our JFK. On the flip side I had a friend run for a local municipal office, think school board / parks and recreation district, and he and his family got a lot of crap from friends and family for his views. I think the 24/7 campaign season and social media combined to create a lack of privacy and nuance that results in a super toxic environment. Getting off my soap box now.
shifty808@reddit
We don’t give a fuck!
Coffee-N-Kettlebells@reddit
I recently read “The 4th Turning is Here” by Neil Howe (the historian who coined the term “Millennial” for the generation that follows ours). I put the question into AI to summarize the ideas in the book (which is dense, but interesting from a generational analysis POV). Here’s the AI summary:
The argument comes from The Fourth Turning by William Strauss and Neil Howe. Their explanation is structural—not about individual capability, but about how generations cycle through roles during recurring historical phases (“turnings”).
Below is the core logic, separated into what the theory claims vs what is inference.
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1) The core claim: Generations are shaped for specific roles
Claim (from the theory): History cycles through four phases (~80–100 years total), and each generation is “cast” into a role: • Prophet (Boomers) → values-driven leaders during crises • Nomad (Gen X) → pragmatic, skeptical, midlife operators • Hero (Millennials) → institution-builders during crisis • Artist (Silent Gen / Gen Z) → process-oriented, risk-aware
Gen X is labeled a “Nomad generation.”
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2) Why Nomads (Gen X) produce fewer top leaders
Claim (from the book):
Nomad generations: • Grow up during institutional breakdown (e.g., 1970s–early 80s distrust era) • Experience less protection and weaker social scaffolding • Become self-reliant, skeptical, and individualistic
As a result, when they reach leadership age: • They don’t naturally gravitate toward institutional authority • They are less trusted to embody collective moral vision • They tend to operate as fixers, operators, or crisis managers, not symbolic leaders
The theory’s framing is blunt: Nomads are better at surviving broken systems than leading unified ones.
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3) Timing matters: who leads during a “Fourth Turning”
Claim (central mechanism):
During a major crisis (“Fourth Turning”): • Society elevates leaders who can rally collective purpose and moral clarity • That aligns with Prophet generations (Boomers)
So even when Gen X is in midlife (prime leadership age), they are: • Positioned as execution layer (generals, operators, advisors) • Not the face of the crisis
This produces a visible skew: • Boomers dominate top political roles • Gen X appears underrepresented • Millennials are still ascending
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4) A more granular mechanism (inference based on their framework)
The book implies—but does not always state explicitly—that:
Inference: • Political systems reward narrative authority (vision, ideology, identity signaling) • Gen X tends to distrust those narratives and avoid them • Therefore, they may self-select out of the path to high office
Also:
Inference: • Voters may prefer leaders who project certainty and moral framing • Gen X’s irony, skepticism, and pragmatism are less electorally resonant
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5) Important caveats (outside the theory)
To calibrate this:
Fact: • Gen X is numerically smaller than Boomers → fewer candidates overall
Fact: • Political leadership often lags generational turnover (age bias)
Inference (plausible alternative explanations): • Institutional gatekeeping (party pipelines favor incumbents) • Career timing (Gen X hit midlife during unusually entrenched Boomer dominance) • Economic constraints shaping career paths away from public service
These explanations are not central to Strauss–Howe but may explain the same pattern without invoking generational archetypes.
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Bottom line
According to The Fourth Turning: Gen X produces fewer top government leaders because it is a Nomad generation—adapted for independence, skepticism, and crisis navigation—not for embodying collective vision or institutional authority during major societal turning points.
More cautiously interpreted: That explanation is one framework among several. It likely captures some behavioral tendencies, but it is not sufficient on its own to explain political representation without considering demographics, institutional dynamics, and timing.
juliaskankles@reddit
Yes, I have wondered this too. Where are our generational leaders? Who are they?
tossaway-florida@reddit (OP)
Right? I want my friends who were in student government in High School to run the country. Pizza every day they promised!
NoCartographer3974@reddit
We don't want to.. we have been in charge for fucking ever. Done being in charge of shit.