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Run GenZ in the news

Gen Z GOP Legislators Launch Org to Recruit and Train Youth Candidates

AP News

Twenty-three-year-old Iowa State Representative Joe Mitchell has teamed up with other millennial and generation Z legislators across the country to launch a new organization, Run GenZ, which will help recruit and train the next generation of conservative leaders running for higher office.

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Run GenZ Releases Video of Historically Young Lawmakers Inspiring Generation Z to Run for Public Office

Cision PR Newswire

Run GenZ, a brand-new candidate recruitment organization, released a video this week that calls on citizens of Generation Z to seek and run for public office. The promotional video features several Gen Z elected lawmakers and highlights the importance of having young people engaged at the state and local level.

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NH Primary Source: State Rep. Alexander leading effort to recruit young conservative candidates

WMUR 9

State Rep. Joe Alexander, a young Republican lawmaker and state GOP leader from Goffstown, will be heading training sessions for the national conservative group Run GenZ later in July.

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NH Primary Source: Former Gov. John Sununu joins Run GenZ advisory board

WMUR 9

SUNUNU ENCOURAGING NEXT GENERATION. Former Gov. John H. Sununu has joined the advisory board of Run GenZ, a grassroots group formed to encourage young conservatives to run for office.

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Gen Z and millennial conservatives seek to recruit and mentor young, diverse candidates

CNN

When Roxy Ndebumadu, a Black conservative woman, ran for city council in Bowie, Maryland, at age 26, it was hard to find mentorship from elected officials of similar backgrounds.

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The conservative kids are all right

Washington Examiner

Maxwell Frost, a Bernie Sanders-endorsed gun control activist and former Uber driver, is set to become the first Generation Z member of Congress after November’s election at just 25 years old.

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Gen Z Is More Liberal Than Older Generations. The Texas Right Has a Plan to Change That—One Local Race at a Time

Texas Monthly

Before he could legally drink or smoke, and before he was old enough to even hold an elected seat, Joel Castro was running for office. In 2017, the then-seventeen-year-old campaigned for a spot on the city council of Alvin, a town of around 27,000 just south of Houston.

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