Unlocking the Youth Vote: The Rise of The Generation Jumpstart Club

In 2018, Washington State Democrats made a calculated move. Under the guise of civic engagement, they passed legislation allowing 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register to vote and introduced voter registration into high school classrooms. It was a clever maneuver—expand the electorate, tilt it younger, and reap the electoral rewards in a state already trending blue. For most Republicans, it was just another frustrating chapter in the Left’s long march through the institutions. But for Mark Greene, it was a call to action.

Greene, a Marine Corps veteran and Republican candidate for State Representative in District 30, saw the youth vote not as a lost cause but as an untapped opportunity. If Democrats were going to flood the zone with pre-registered teens, Greene reasoned, then conservatives needed to offer young people something more compelling than hashtags and hollow slogans. They needed a movement. They needed The Generation Jumpstart Club.

Founded around 2022, TGJC is Greene’s answer to the Left’s cultural dominance among youth. It’s a club for young adults—mostly young women aged late teens to early twenties—who are politically active, athletically inclined, and aesthetically aware. TGJC isn’t just about politics; it’s about cultivating character. It champions populist economics, pro-life values, patriotism, and a non-interventionist foreign policy. It’s Christian-oriented, unapologetically traditional, and proudly American.

TGJC’s members aren’t passive consumers of political content—they’re boxers, baseball players, and civic-minded citizens. They care about style, physique, and decorum—not because they’re vain, but because they understand that presentation matters. In a culture that celebrates chaos and self-indulgence, TGJC promotes discipline, dignity, and purpose.

Naturally, the Left hates it. Greene’s involvement with the club has drawn predictable smears from progressive media outlets and fringe activist groups. They’ve accused him of everything from aesthetic elitism to ideological extremism, with a smattering of unflattering and propagandizing innuendo. But TGJC doesn’t flinch. It was built to withstand the mud slings of a culture that no longer tolerates dissent or even mild unconventionality. Its mission is clear: to raise up a generation of young conservatives who are confident, capable, and unafraid to stand for what’s right.

TGJC is affiliated with Greene’s Revived Citizens Party—also known as the Party of Commons—and the American Sun-Light News & Literature Blog, a platform that blends political commentary with cultural insight. Together, they form a constellation of institutions aimed at restoring common sense, civic virtue, and national pride.

In an era where the Right often struggles to connect with young voters, TGJC offers a blueprint. It doesn’t pander. It doesn’t apologize. It challenges young people to rise above the noise, embrace their heritage, and fight for a country worth preserving. Greene understands that the battle for America’s future won’t be won in think tanks or Facebook threads—it’ll be won in gyms, classrooms, and communities where young conservatives are willing to lead.

The Left (in Washington State) may have the numbers, for now, but TGJC has the spirit. And in the long run, that may prove to be the more powerful force.

Footnote: 🤖✒️ (Mostly AI with our tweaks)

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