Now is not the time to exaggerate the appeal of dictators or muddy what a dictatorship actually means.
President Trump told voters he wanted to act like a dictator “only on day one”, but by day 26 declared “he who saves his country does not violate any law”. Trump called president Zelensky a dictator, with Elon Musk adding “despised”, despite rising approval ratings for the democratically-elected Ukrainian leader.
With that backdrop, the claim that more than half of Gen Z Brits want the UK to be a dictatorship, based on a recent Channel 4 study, would be extremely worrying, if it was a true reflection of their views. It suggests a coming tide of sympathy for authoritarianism among our youngest generation and a bleak future for democracy.
But there are reasons to be very sceptical this is really what Gen Z thinks.
The study actually asked 13- to 27-year-olds whether they agreed “the UK would be a better place if a strong leader was in charge who does not have to bother with parliament and elections.” In their findings and press release, Channel 4 didn’t suggest that this equated to support for a dictatorship – but just about every news and comment piece that picked up the study did.
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It might seem like a very justifiable interpretation – but we wanted to check, so we ran our own test in a survey of 1,000 13- to 27-year-olds. We simply replaced the wording “strong leader” with “dictator” – and instead of 52%, found only 22% agree with that version.