Sam Freedman
I suspect many readers knew little, if anything, about Charlie Kirk before his murder on the 10th September. But if you have teenage kids they probably did. For months my son has been being showing me clips on TikTok of Kirk being “owned” by progressive students during his tour of university campuses. In schools across the UK this has been the biggest story of the year by far. With his fast-speaking and combative style, Kirk was perfectly suited to a site where you have an average of three seconds to engage the viewer before they flick on to the next video.
Meanwhile, my eldest daughter has been captivated by the overthrow of the Nepalese Prime Minister, K. P. Sharma Oli, and his replacement by former Supreme Court Justice Sushila Karki. Not only did she know about this through watching TikTok videos but the revolution itself was driven on the streaming site by young people barely older than her.
The immediate trigger for protests was the government’s decision to shut down dozens of social media sites including Facebook, X and YouTube. Ministers claimed this was because the sites were failing to abide by new regulations. But the “Gen Z” protestors believed the real reason was to stop the spread of viral memes about nepotism, with videos of politicians’ children living in luxury at the heart of the campaign. Protests quickly descended into violence and the resignation of ministers. Incredibly, the new Prime Minister was chosen via a vote on Discord (another social media platform).
Though Nepal is one of the most dramatic examples of this type of “Gen Z” protest it is not unique. Last year the Bangladeshi government was overthrown by a similar demographic, and there were mass protests in Nairobi at new taxes organised over TikTok and other platforms. In August, the Indonesian government found themselves facing violent protests over salary boosts for politicians. Tellingly, one of their countermeasures was to ask TikTok to stop live streaming. The average age in all of these countries is 30 or below (25 in Nepal and just 20 in Kenya), compared to 41 in the UK. That magnifies the effect both of disenchantment with lack of employment opportunities but also the power of new forms of politics.
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