How the 'Uber Economy' Is Helping Conservatives Rally Young Voters
Sitting on a couch on Jimmy Kimmel Live! this February, Ashton Kutcher spoke out against what he sees as needless regulations that are preventing Uber from thriving in major cities around the country.
“There’s only some cities where there’s some bizarre old antiquated legislation which doesn’t allow it to exist there,” he said of the app-based car service, in which he invests. “Basically it’s like mafioso village mentality of ‘we’re not gonna let the new guy come in.’ Like in Miami, [where] it doesn’t exist because of some dumb regulation that said it can’t exist there.”
Kutcher’s comments could be seen as a surprise. Thanks to his years of playing Kelso on “That 70’s Show,” he is a certified millennial icon. That makes him an unlikely spokesman for reducing government regulations, a cause where young people and conservatives generally don’t see eye-to-eye.
According to a
recent Pew Research Center poll, adults ages 18 to 33 tend to be more politically independent than past generations, but still skew towards the Democratic Party. Overall, they are less conservative, and tend to be more fond of government regulation of the economy.
But increasingly, conservatives see deregulation as a selling point to younger voters, especially where it intersects with tech startups like Uber that young voters might see less government involvement as improving their lives.
Last month, Sen. Marco Rubio (R), a Miami native, has made stops in the Google headquarters in Washington and spoken at an Uber-sponsored event. In both instances, he made appeals to deregulate industries or to loosen specific policies that might stifle the growth of these startups.
“Regulation should always be used as a way to help the public and ensure safety. It should never be used as a tool of anti-competitive activity,” Rubio said at the Uber event.
Pushback from the taxi industry against on-demand car services, such as Uber and Lyft, have been mounting in cities from Chicago and Paris to Seattle. As usership from the app has risen in these cities, taxi ridership has been on the decline. Taxi unions and associations in several cities have lawsuits in progress against Uber, with the Western Washington Taxi Cab Association in Seattle claiming that the company is operating an ‘unlawful and deceptive business practice,, for example.
“We should never allow government power and government regulations to be used to protect an established incumbent industry at the expense of an innovative competitor,” Rubio continued.