Posted on 10/16/2014 1:49:04 PM PDT by Kaslin
The contrast between New Hampshires two candidates for U.S. Senate couldnt have been clearer this past weekend. In one town, Senator Jeanne Shaheen spoke to the International Brotherhood Of Electrical Workers over a pancake breakfast, and in another, former Senator Scott Brown received a rowdy and enthusiastic reception at a tailgate organized by College Republicans at the University of New Hampshire.
It sounds like a normal weekend in October, so why the significance? I cant help but marvel at the juxtaposition: a traditional, pre-planned campaign event with the candidate as the main attraction and the other, a tailgate loosely organized mainly through text messages and social media, where the candidate dropped in to greet students. Heres why it matters: the former represents the campaigns of Republicans past, while the latter exemplifies where we need to go in the future.
I understand the appeal (in theory) of the pancake breakfast: its a tame crowd contained within four walls, thus mitigating the possibility for the kind of unscripted moments that have sunk entire campaigns. In the age of smartphones and sophisticated research entities employing hundreds of trackers, however, is this still a reasonable expectation? Were living in an age where just about anyone is capable of capturing the next Bruce Braley-[just] a farmer from Iowa gaffe at any time. And yet, it is precisely this fear however unsubstantiated that keeps our candidates away from campuses.
It means something to this generation when candidates come to their communities to talk to them. Its what shows newly minted voters that our Party believes that their votes are worth earning; its what helps College Republicans and other conservative students expand their influence despite the pervasive liberalism in academia, and its what will help us win back points in the all-important cares about people like me category.
Reaching older voters is certainly important and this is where Republicans excel. We reach these generations with a great deal of thought put into television, radio, direct mail, and calls to landline phones, as well as relevant community events. In fact, I think we can all agree that as a function of both strategy and magnanimity, our Party should always aim to reach voters where they are. This, however, must necessarily include millennials, who decided the last presidential election and are playing a key role in midterm races. A candidate who doesnt take money out of the budget or time out of the schedule to reach young voters presents much more than just a practical problem for our Party; it signals a dereliction of duty in passing our principles on to the next generation.
Scott Brown and his campaign team ought to be commended for getting it right. He came to campus with an open and artless demeanor and started a dialogue with young voters. When extraneous and inappropriate remarks were made in the raucous crowd (a foreseeable hazard of being on a college campus, and not at a College Republican event, I might add), his campaign appropriately condemned them, but didnt allow it to detract from the prevailing message: Scott Brown is committed to reaching all of New Hampshires voters. I couldnt be prouder of his courage to reach my generation in an unconventional way.
A campus by its nature is a loud and colorful kind of place an energetic environment that should be enticing to candidates and campaigns, not objectionable. Millennials generally agree with our Party about limiting the size and scope of government and they become more disenchanted with President Obama and Democrats by the day. While theyre not entirely sold on Republicans, its because we have not made our pitch directly to them. With less than three weeks to go before the election and most of our elections being decided on the margins, my advice to candidates is to be bold, be disruptive, and go where young voters are online and on campus. We can help.
Scott Brown is a perfect Romney Republican.
In case there is any doubt, from a conservative standpoint, that is not a compliment.
The same dynamic demonstrated in this story from Texas operates in Washington as well.
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3216092/posts
And Brown is a poster child for it.
Spread the word
Not a single Republican voted for Obamacare. Fact.
I am pretty sure you are full of crap. No republican voted for Obamacare and a Republican Senate would never have passed Obamacare. Fact.
Man on man rape way up in the military. Thanks Scotty
Would it be ok with you if the men raped by the fags your hero Brown voted into the military call him satans twin?
Brown is currently running ads in which he expresses his support for Planned Parenthood. He’s ‘pro-choice’,,,
Yep.
I agree, but it's a good thing you're not in the same hotel as me right now. They're having a fundraiser for Jeanne Shaheen, and the lobby is very busy with these morons (Manchester NH Radisson).
Apparently there's some kind of reception upstairs from the lobby -- maybe I can find a way to drop a turd in the punch bowl.
Republicans do NOT have a problem with the “youth” vote.
We have a problem with the “non-white” youth vote.
White women (18-29) consistently vote 45%-50% for the GOP.
In 2012, young white women voted 49% for Romney, 48% for Obama.
White men (18-29) consistently vote 55%-60% for the GOP.
Young white voters are only about 5% less Conservative than their parents and their grandparents.
And young white voters always get more Conservative as they age.
The problem is that each year there are fewer and fewer young white voters, and more and more young non-white voters.
Non-white youths are even more Left than their parents.
They consistently vote 80%-90% for Democrats.
Excellent analysis.
Every year 2.48m (mostly white, majority R voting) people die.
And are replaced by 2.52m (majority non-white, heavily D voting) people.
Well...enjoy your ObamaCare.
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