So... we've identified the problem (that most millennials are under an illusion), and we've also found that traditional education on the subject doesn't work in lifting that veil (perhaps because the millennials are as a group too cynical to believe you). You can lament about how it's a sad state of affairs that traditional education doesn't work all you like, but that doesn't help solve the problem of low voter turnout. And yes, pandering to the young gets them to vote for the wrong reasons, but is that worse than not voting at all? Get them used to it first, then tell them the real reason behind why they're doing it. Perhaps, which illustrates the problem. My impression is that millennials believe that they are voting on behalf of the politicians, when in fact, they are voting on behalf of themselves. The politicians, media, (and probably many other factors), have created a illusion of a top-down power structure, when in reality, it exists upon the whims of those that vote.
No, but I doubt that politicians will do it any time soon. Millenials have less money, and a track record of less-engagement than other voting blocks. Same problem, lack of incentive.And yes, pandering to the young gets them to vote for the wrong reasons, but is that worse than not voting at all?