Gen Z activists bring DNC to peers after championing Dems on RV tour

US

Sam Schwartz just finished caravaning around the country in an RV for 28 days with half a dozen fellow Gen Z activists. The 20-year-old gun reform activist stopped in 15 districts across 11 states on a mission to get Democrats elected to Congress.

On Sunday, he boarded a plane from Palm Beach, Florida, to Chicago to attend the Democratic National Convention with two of his traveling companions: his girlfriend, Emma Levine, 20, and Highland Park shooting survivor Drew Spiegel, 19.

Being at the DNC to celebrate the Harris-Walz ticket is a natural culmination of their cross-country Tour to Save Democracy, said Schwartz.

The trio will document their experience on social media to keep the Gen Z voters they met on the road engaged in the political process. They also plan to share what they heard on their monthlong tour of vulnerable Republican districts.

“It’s not that young people have different concerns. They’re literally the same,” said Schwartz, citing gun violence, reproductive rights and climate change. “It’s just that, for young people, they’re definitely more pressing issues because we’re going to inherit the planet and country.”

The college students believe electing Vice President Kamala Harris and turning red congressional seats blue will advance all these causes.

Activism arises from tragedy

Schwartz is a rising junior at the New England Conservatory of Music. He always knew he wanted to score movies, but when his cousin Alex Schachter was murdered in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, when they were both 14, he launched into activism too.

“I was not ever politically active before that,” Schwartz said. “I knew next to nothing. I really couldn’t tell you the difference between a Republican and a Democrat.”

Suddenly, he was attending rallies, talking to Florida legislators and writing op-eds in the local papers in honor of his cousin.

He saw Democrats pushing for universal background checks and blanket bans on assault weapons like the one that killed his cousin, and he saw Republicans pushing against these efforts.

An entrance to The Covenant School is seen on May 24, 2023, in Nashville, Tennessee. The school is the site where a deadly shooting in March that year took the lives of three 9-year-olds and three adults. (George Walker IV/AP)

A mass shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, in March 2023 was a major turning point for him because of its similarities to the Parkland shooting five years earlier. A lone gunman walked into a school with a semiautomatic rifle again.

“I kinda mentally snapped and said why don’t we sit outside the Capitol Building? Let’s just wait and not go until we get some type of movement,” he recalled.

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