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Millennial Lawmakers Put a Fresh Face on West Virginia Politics

Delegate Josh Higgenbotham, 20, reviews legislation in the House Education Committee.
WV Legislature Photography, Perry Bennett
Delegate Josh Higgenbotham, 20, reviews legislation in the House Education Committee.

More than 30 new faces joined the West Virginia House of Delegates this year and more than a few of them fit into the fastest growing generation in the country. Millennials are growing in numbers at the Capitol and are pushing their more senior counterparts to think a little differently. 

Delegate Josh Higgenbotham, 20, reviews legislation in the House Education Committee.
Credit WV Legislature Photography, Perry Bennett
Delegate Josh Higgenbotham, 20, reviews legislation in the House Education Committee.

Millennials -people ages 18 to 34- make up about 25 percent of the country’s population. But the National Conference of State Legislatures reports the age group only makes up about 5 percent of the representatives in state legislatures. At the age of 20, Delegate Josh Higgenbotham is one of the youngest members of West Virginia’s legislature where he said things are starting to change.

“All the young people in this hallway here, in this chamber, each and every one of us are passionate about what we do and love helping people," said Higgenbotham. "That is why we kept getting elected and why we continue to grow and strengthen our numbers here in Charleston.” 

During the 2016 election, West Virginia saw a drastic increase in its millennial representation. Now 13 percent of the state’s legislative body is made up of members of the young age group.

Many of these legislators said they jumped into public service to share fresh ideas and fresh perspectives that range -in terms of policy- from water innovation, to broadband internet expansion, to job creation, but according to 20-year-old Delegate Saira Blair, what they have in common, is a desire to see party lines dissolve to create a better West Virginia.

Delegate Saira Blair, 20, chats with a House page on the floor.
Credit WV Legislature Photography, Perry Bennett
Delegate Saira Blair, 20, chats with a House page on the floor.

“We have watched so much gridlock and hatred coming out of Washington DC, that we just don’t want any part of that, and we automatically associate it with liberal or conservative, when in reality most of us millennials and those below us are moderate,” said Blair.

A caucus of millennial legislators developed in these beginning weeks of session. Thirty-one-year-old Del. Sean Hornbuckle is one of the members who headed up the group, and said the goal is to promote those bi-partisan ideals. 

Delegate Sean Hornbuckle, 31, speaks out during session.
Credit WV Legislature Photography, Perry Bennett
Delegate Sean Hornbuckle, 31, speaks out during session.

“It’s going to be completely non-partisan issues, more of just a think tank," said Hornbuckle. "We want to think about how we not only push the state forward, but also how do we make sure -whether in government or just involved in your communities- get more younger folks to the table to help aid in that effort.”

So what has caused the spike in millennial representation in West Virginia? Some suggest it’s the frustration over political polarization, some say it’s the recent presidential election, but each of these young legislators mentioned something else that’s driving them, something much more personal.

Delegate John Williams, 26, said,“We care and we are seeing our friends leave this state; my childhood best friends, they are both gone. ” 

Delegate Zack Maynard, 24, said, “We see a lot of influx of kids leaving, I’ve graduated kids from college, high school that have left the state.” 

"We've watched our friends and our family leave the state because there just aren't opportunitites here for them," said Blair.These millennial lawmakers talk about the thing that drives them the most; watching their friends and families leave.

“It’s no mystery in West Virginia, I think we lead the country in Exodus, in people leaving,” said Hornbuckle. "So if we are to reverse that trend, we have to capture young people and make them want to stay." 

Maynard said lawmakers should be focused on finding ways to keep young West Virginians, like himself, in the state, and he and his fellow millennial legislators are equipped to do just that.

Delegate John Williams, 26, speaks up during session.
Credit WV Legislature Photography, Perry Bennett
Delegate John Williams, 26, speaks up during session.

“If we can’t build a base around what our kids want or moving this state forward, we are going to lose a generation," said Maynard.

Of the 17 millennial lawmakers in the House of Delegates this year, nine are first term members and eight are returning. In the Senate, Majority Leader Ryan Ferns is the only millennial member.

Copyright 2017 West Virginia Public Broadcasting

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