‘Boys State’ is a Fascinating Look at a Very American Event
Teenagers in Texas sure do love their politics

“The desire to be a politician should bar you for life from ever being one.” – Billy Connolly
Since 1935, The American Legion has sponsored Boys State (and Girls State, which is somehow a separated event, even in the 21st Century, but we’ll get back to that), a national civics program designed to immerse seventeen-year-olds into the nuts and bolts of public governance.
This is achieved by teaching kids how legislation is formed, how information can be promulgated in a helpful, unbiased way and how…I’m just kidding. They do it by making it a competition. This is America! More pertinently, in Boys State, it’s Texas. So, what’s notable to a non-American is that although there’s ostensibly an election between two fictional parties (The Nationalists and Federalists) who are framed as being conservative and progressive, there are “progressive” kids whose political hero is Napoleon. This is not Republican versus Democrat, it’s Tea Party Republican versus Reagan-era Republican. So, with that in mind, let’s meet the main kids.
Those To The Right Of Genghis Khan
The Federalists are the more frightening side on display. I don’t like to attack a teenager but these kids…my god. Young Ben is a seventeen-year-old owner of a Ronald Reagan doll. Who says, and I quote, “I don’t think of myself as white, I think of myself as American.” Who refuses to countenance abortion even in cases of rape. However, he’s a self-proclaimed “politics junkie” and he does seem to know how to play the game. Certainly as it’s played to this crowd.
And then there’s Robert, who looks like if Jeff Spicoli from Fast Times At Ridgemont High joined the Republican party at college. Robert has an easy-going charm and confidence that is an obvious choice to sway a bunch of young guys. He doesn’t immediately come across as possessing a laser intellect but it’s not like the U.S. hasn’t got form in electing people because they look successful. It’s also revealed in the course of filming that he’s prepared to hide his own more progressive leanings necessary to hold onto votes. Which is a nicer way of saying he’ll throw the reproductive rights of women under the bus because it’s not a vote winner. With a thousand teenage boys. Who, if you’ll allow me to editorialize a little, shouldn’t even have the tiniest right to weigh in on that subject.
Those (Slightly) To The Left Of Genghis Khan
The Nationalist candidate most focused on by the filmmakers is Steven Garza. The son of Mexican immigrants, he’s a calmer, more reasoned presence than many of the boys shown. There’s a telling moment early on when Robert makes a loud, energetic, ‘hoorah’ speech intended to get the crowd roaring his name and it just fizzles out. Steven then steps up and makes an impassioned, intelligently worded speech and the crowd goes wild. The look of stunned disbelief on Robert’s face is much how I imagine a shark would look if, just as it was about to eat up a seal, saw the seal whip out a flamethrower. “This isn’t how life has worked up to now, what the hell?”
René Otero is the campaign manager put against Ben and he’s very much an outlier among the gathering. Firstly, he’s African American in a convention where, as he puts it, “I’ve never seen so many white people ever” and also, he’s a recent arrival from Chicago so he doesn’t have the automatic Texas Pride™ factor to sway the crowd. What he does have is the focus (and glasses) of a man 40 years his senior.
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