Posted on 05/31/2006 1:31:15 PM PDT by BlackRazor
Poll: 73 Percent of Young People Will Vote in 2006
Theodora A. Blanchfield , May 22, 2006
If the 2004 and 2005 elections are any indicator, young voters will continue to turn out at the polls in record numbers in upcoming elections.
Turnout in 2004 among the 18-to-24 year old bloc increased 11 percent over 2000 turnout, while general turnout increased only by four percent. In key governor races in Virginia and New Jersey in 2005, youth turnout continued to grow while general turnout dropped. A new poll released by Young Voter Strategies, a project of the George Washington Graduate School of Political Management, shows that 73 percent of young people who are eligible to vote are likely to cast ballots this November.
If you ask them, they will vote, said Heather Smith, director for Young Voter Strategies. Its figuring out how to ask them.
Young Voter Strategies and GW-Battleground pollsters Celinda Lake of Lake Research Partners and Ed Goeas of The Tarrance Group conducted a poll of 500 18-30 year olds. The poll, which was conducted April 27 May 1, 2006, surveyed youths on their political concerns, likeliness to vote and the best ways to reach out to them.
This generation will be 25 percent of the population by 2016 and it is likely that the party that wins in 2006 will be the party in power in 10 years, Smith said.
Young voters are particularly important because voting patterns even at a young age impact how someone votes for the rest of their lives. Lake said that once a voter had supported the same party three times, it was probable that they would continue to vote that way for the rest of their lives.
Young people voted largely Democratic in 2004. It would be a shame to lose those votes in 2006 and 2008, Lake, who is a Democratic pollster, said.
The survey also found that 63 percent of respondents thought that the country was on the wrong track. The top three issues that concerned young voters were gas prices, education and jobs and the economy. Forty-nine percent of those polled believed that Democrats would do a better job of addressing their top issue, while 28 percent believed Republicans would do a better job. In a generic ballot question, 45 percent said they would vote Democrat while only 26 percent said they would vote Republican.
Though these numbers seem disappointing to Republicans, there may be hope, according to Republican pollster Goeas.
While overall, young people believe that the country is headed in the wrong direction, 60 percent of those who identified themselves as Republicans believe the country is headed in the right direction.
Young Republicans are loyal. If theyre Republican, they are intensely Republican, he said. They show an intensity other groups dont.
Young Republicans also intensely favor the President, giving him an approval rating of 76 percent and the Republican Party a favorable rating of 85 percent.
Young Voter Strategies plans to use the results for a national nonpartisan project to register 350,000 18-29 year old voters. The project will use a myriad of strategies, including e-mail and mobile phone, presentations by religious leaders and college professors and outreach by celebrities and musicians at concerts.
Young Voter Strategies will work with a number of organizations, including The American Association of State College and Universities, The Center for Civic Participation and The State Public Interest Research Groups to register voters. Each project will be followed and analyzed by an academic researcher. Following the 2006 elections, Young Voter Strategies and the researchers will produce a Young Voter Toolkit with strategies to help involve young voters in the future.
The article correctly notes that youth turnout increased by 11% in 2004, but curiously it fails to mention that they still had the lowest turnout of any age group, at 47%. The notion that they will vote at a 73% clip in 2006 is laughable.
I meant 2004, of course, not 2000.
I call BS on this one...
This is the funniest poll I've seen in a long time. Seventy-three percent! Ha ha ha ha! What are they smoking, and can I have some of it?
cover story for the vote fraud.
fluff to excite the democrats.
all this tells me that that we have a 60% chunk of the young republicans who are already broken glass republicans.
My son is about to turn 25. My thirty something brother and I are fed up with Bush and ticked at the rino's. My son is a Bush diehard, par excellence. If he's an indication of younger voters, the GOP will do okay.
I second that BS and add a yea right.
"Dude.
"It's about global warming, man.
"Like . . . and what do we need borders for anyway."
/today's youngsters
Democrats, mark my words.
Dude....who got kicked off the island this week? /sarc
Rock the vote.
A good afternoon laugh.
When (of course) nowhere near 73% of "young people" show up, the moonbats will immediately claim the young were disenfranchised. Diebold! Diebold! (you know, the Diebold age and race detectors are programmed to toss out votes of the young and/or minority.)
They will be further enraged by the obviously insane notion that some number in the neighborhood of 50% of those young people who actually do show up may vote Republican.
In their "diverse" world, it's a conspiracy if people think differently than they do.
...and 67% of those young democrat voters will vote Republican once they get older, get a job and start paying taxes...
LMAO, yeah right. If 25% of them vote, I'll eat my hat.
73% percent will vote as long as it's a phone ballot with poll workers calling them. Go stand in a boring line? I don't think so.
"...the lowest turnout of any age group, at 47%."
I think that's for a presidential election. For mid term elections I think the average is closer to 25%. That's from memory but I don't think I'm off by much if I am off.
My guess is that better than 50% of the 73% who say they'll vote in 2006 won't get around to actually doing it. A good number of them won't even be registered. People of that age just don't tend to vote, especially in mid term elections. I wouldn't be surprised to see better than usual turnout for that demographic in November, but I doubt we see anywhere near 73% actually voting.
More like Crack the Vote............
I guess Howard Dean will soon start promoting rumors of a Draft again :)
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