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Democrat Youth Support Dwindling

HOPE YEN   02/24/10 12:01 AM ET   AP

Democrats Youth Support
A new study shows Democrats are losing their youth support.

WASHINGTON — Whither the youth vote? A year after backing Barack Obama by an overwhelming 2-to-1 ratio, young adults are quickly cooling toward Democrats amid dissatisfaction over the lack of change in Washington and an escalating war in Afghanistan.

A study by the Pew Research Center, being released Wednesday, highlights the eroding support from 18-to-29 year olds whose strong turnout in November 2008 was touted by some demographers as the start of a new Democratic movement.

The findings are significant because they offer further proof that the diverse coalition of voters Obama cobbled together in 2008 – including high numbers of first-timers, minorities and youths – are not Democratic Party voters who can necessarily be counted on.

While young adults remain decidedly more liberal, the survey found the Democratic advantage among 18-to-29 year olds has substantially narrowed – from a record 62 percent identifying as Democrat vs. 30 percent for the GOP in 2008, down to 54 percent vs. 40 percent last December. It was the largest percentage point jump in those who identified or leaned Republican among all the voting age groups.

Young adults' voting enthusiasm also crumbled.

During the presidential election, turnout among 18-to-29 year olds was the highest in years, making up roughly 20 percent of the voters in many states including Virginia and New Jersey, due in part to high participation from young blacks and Hispanics.

That percentage, however, dropped by half for the gubernatorial races in those states last November where Republicans celebrated wins as black groups pushed Obama to do more to soften the economic blow from mortgage foreclosures and Latinos saw little progress on immigration reform. Young adults were also the least likely of any age group to identify themselves as regular voters.

"This is a generation of young adults who made a big splash politically in 2008," said Paul Taylor, executive vice president of the Pew Research Center and co-author of the report. "But a year and a half later, they show signs of disillusionment with the president – and, perhaps, with politics itself."

Democrats saw evidence of this last November, when Republicans toppled Democrats from power in governor's races in New Jersey and Virginia. Young, minority and new voters who Obama pulled into the fold in 2008 didn't turn out at the same levels for the two Democratic candidates. The same thing happened in the Massachusetts Senate race last month.

The lesson: Neither party has a hold on 18-to-29 year olds. They tend to vote far less than other age groups, yet they have proven to be a powerful constituency if they are persuaded to vote. And that means the race is on by both Republicans and Democrats to make inroads into the next generation of voters.

Analysts say the findings reflect the fast pace at which young voters live their lives, and both parties should take note of their fickleness.

"If you don't respond to their needs, hopes or dreams quickly, they're gone," said Matthew Dowd, an independent political analyst who was a strategist in former President George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign. "They'll leave the playing field or switch their allegiance."

"They haven't become Republicans and they aren't solid Democrats. They're just looking for leaders who are where they are and will deliver," Dowd said. "Both parties have to be cognizant of the volatility of that group."

According to the Pew survey, large numbers of young adults said they personally liked the president but were dissatisfied with his rate of progress in changing Washington, such as improving the economy and fixing health care. Just 46 percent of 18-to-29 year olds said they believed Obama had changed Washington, compared to 48 percent who said he had not. Only baby boomers were more cynical, with 52 percent saying Obama had not changed the way things work in Washington.

The young adults also were the only age group in which more disapproved than approved of Obama's handling of the war in Afghanistan. Only 34 percent supported his decision in December to send an additional 30,000 U.S. troops to the region, while 50 percent disapproved.

Still, when asked why Obama hadn't done more to bring change, young adults were somewhat forgiving, with about 56 percent blaming the president's opponents and special interests; only 30 percent said Obama was the one at fault for not trying hard enough.

The findings are part of Pew's broad portrait of the so-called millennial generation, the children of baby boomers who came of age in the new millennium. Demographers believe this generation can reshape U.S. culture and politics because of their demographic size and political outlook.

Making up nearly one-fourth of U.S. voters, 18-to-29 year olds are less religious, more racially diverse and liberal on social issues such as gay rights. They are steeped in digital technology and social media, and are strong believers in the view that the government should do more to solve problems.

For example:

_Nearly two-thirds admit to texting while driving, and more than 8 in 10 sleep with their cell phones by their bed.

_Nearly 4 in 10 have at least one tattoo; about half of those people have two to five tattoos. Roughly 1 in 4 have a body piercing in a place other than an earlobe – six times the share of older adults.

_About 37 percent of young adults are unemployed or out of the workforce, the highest share among this age group in more than three decades. A record share – 39.6 percent – was enrolled in college, and one in 8 millennials ages 22 and older say they had "boomeranged" back into their parents' home because of the recession.

The Pew survey is based on interviews with 2,020 adults by cell phone or landline from Jan. 14 to 27. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points for all respondents, higher for subgroups.

___

AP National Political Writer Liz Sidoti contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Pew Research Center: http://pewresearch.org/

(This version CORRECTS figures to 56 percent and 30 percent instead of 60 percent and 25 percent and CORRECTS to one in eight instead of one in six on boomerangers and reasons for lack of change to reflect UPDATED Pew numbers.)

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WASHINGTON — Whither the youth vote? A year after backing Barack Obama by an overwhelming 2-to-1 ratio, young adults are quickly cooling toward Democrats amid dissatisfaction over the lack of ch...
WASHINGTON — Whither the youth vote? A year after backing Barack Obama by an overwhelming 2-to-1 ratio, young adults are quickly cooling toward Democrats amid dissatisfaction over the lack of ch...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alicam
11:10 AM on 02/25/2010
Well put. And this largely explains my dissatisfaction with Obama. He doesn't have the courage and the strength of character to stand up to anyone. He's this weakling who wants everyone to like him. From before he even got in the White House he has been a bipartisan lover (no red or blue America). Instead, he needs to represent his party in his actions and stop trying to be everyone's buddy.
11:35 AM on 02/25/2010
I guess you didn't pay attention to his inauguration speech.
09:44 AM on 02/25/2010
Democrats didn't have the youth vote, Obama did.
09:23 AM on 02/25/2010
The Youth are not loyal to the Democrats...how refreshing to have a constituency that votes for you based upon beliefs and ideas and not party loyalty. The sad thing is that since they don't vote in every election, the have a minimal effect on the political system.

Republicans are known to have a constituency that will vote in every election. That means they will always have a say. I consider that to be a teaching moment.
09:04 AM on 02/25/2010
If anything, dissatisfaction with President Obama by the people who voted for him is just a manifestation of the irrational and silly demand for instant-gratification that the mainstream of America is enamored with. And this doesn't just apply to the "youth" vote either, although we have sadly certainly passed that tendency down to them.

It also reflects a basic ignorance of the political realities that exist in Washington, D.C. For those of you who don't know, a President is not a king and cannot force Congress to do anything. There are also very powerful interests in Washington that spend years grooming certain people to serve as their representatives in government.

And that doesn't go away just because a Democrat wins the Presidency.

If you want to direct your anger toward politicians, the place to start is Congress. They are the ones with the power to get things passed or to keep things the same. Just because Obama was elected doesn't mean you get to sit back and think that you are done working to fix the problems that plague American politics.

Although it is easy to hope someone else will do all the work for you, you can't credibly complain when it turns out that person needed your support, especially when things got rough.
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08:31 AM on 02/25/2010
I wouldn't say they are losing our vote, they are just wasting our vote by trying to find common ground with the troglodytes across the isle. If we wanted to find common ground, we would have bought the GOP a round of beers on Nov 4.

We want what we put you in office for - Change. Even if we don't get it, we KNOW we won't get if from Bush & co.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Rachel O
07:58 AM on 02/25/2010
Can't wait to see the GOP's attempts to attract the youth vote. I demand to see Mitt Romney on a halfpipe.
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06:51 AM on 02/25/2010
The youth is the single greatest threat to the GOP, the GOP has created a certainty of their irrelevance and the youth of America will close that deal with time. Time is on our side with the youth being the one's who will continue to crush any twinkling of the potential hope the GOP may like to think still exists. When it comes time to vote Obama will be voted in again and the youth vote will be a major reason for it.

The GOP is so irrelevant they are certainly drawing closer to being nothing more than a footnote in reference books about politics. The GOP will be seen as the only one's who couldn't get it together when things needed to be done for the sake of the citizens.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PolecatMtn
06:28 AM on 02/25/2010
Young folk, don't be seduced by the GOP or conservatives. They mean you harm. The only thing they worship is their money. Consider a total change, a break with the past and look to the future. Check out the Modern Whig Party.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Rachel O
08:03 AM on 02/25/2010
The best thing the GOP can hope for is that the majority of the youth will be too apathetic to vote. Unfortunately there's a distinct possibility they'll get their wish.
03:51 AM on 02/25/2010
Hmm, from the perspective of a "younger person" who was 18 election year......I don't think Democrats are losing anyone really. A lot of younger people are independent and some are sadly rather apolitical. Most of the, did vote for Obama, but that doesn't necessarily infer that they were "progressive" or translate to support for other democratic candidates/ democratic party loyalty.... Just that they preferred Obama's policies over McCain's. (or were scared of Sarah Palin....)
And it's not the democrats aren't losing to republicans though. Most young people I know are socially liberal but moderate or even conservative on other issues. I'd say alot of them lean libertarian. At least around here, on a large southern college campus. All in all, I'd say demographics are ripe for a 3rd or 4th party (not the joke "tea party" either) in around 20 years when the "young people" are running things.
03:52 AM on 02/25/2010
Ignore the typos haha.
12:10 AM on 02/25/2010
Obama hasn't lost the youth vote one bit. The reason why he got, and will get, the youht vote is because presidential elections are a big deal. Gubernatorial races are no barometer for what the youth vote is and isn't thinking at the moment. Many young people don't even know that there are even mid term elections. Heck, I know many fellow thirty somethings who think that congressmen have four year terms.

This type of lack of knowledge is why kids don't show up on off year elections or gubernatorial races. If they were up to date with politics I don't doubt the vast majority of young people wouldn't turn up and vote overwhelmingly democratic. Whenever I speak to someone in the 18-29 age range and we get to talking about politics I always bring up this topic. More often than not these people are unaware that there are more than just one election. So the problem is not interest, it's being uninformed.
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NevadaLib
pwning cons since 2007
12:44 AM on 02/25/2010
yeah, young adults and everybody else alike, the turnout for midterm elections is always low. and the youth is considerably more progressive than the current democratic party's agenda.
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clearwaterclearmind
couldn't stand bush. can't stand obama for the sam
01:44 AM on 02/25/2010
he pi$$ed the youth off.

the kids know that obama equated gay marriage to an incestous relationship between an uncle and his niece.

the kids remember when obama LAUGHED at them for voting a question about legalizing marijuana to the top of a list of questions he would answer.

obama has been the first politician to bust open that disillusionment cherry for many american youth.

thanks to obama, kids know that politician means liar.
03:46 AM on 02/25/2010
I think you are mistaken. The people who advise Obama have literally turned a landmark MANDATE into a potentially catastrophic defeat for liberals in the next elections. By the neverending pandering to the GOP< who LOST, the elections, the bad appointments, the mishandling of the health care debacle, the avoidance of campaing reform, the blunders of the stimulus bill, the bailouts of Wall St, Banks, autos, and misgoverned cities like LA, team Obama, in concert with the worst Senate leadership in memory, they have lost not only the independent older voter, but now the younger crowd, which was cynical to begin with.....Obama had a unique opportunity to make a difference yet he and his advisers squandered it...in just one year.....it is going to be a long 3 years and it won't be pretty...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Cause Endures
11:56 PM on 02/24/2010
As a member of this youth, I watched the emergence of Regan Democrats, and how they were chased year after year by the new representatives of corporate America, the Democratic party.

Obama argued on Social Democratic principles, and until he flipped on his contribution promise, seemed as close as it could get to the good ole' days of FDR that I read about in school.

But he has proven to be nothing more than another Democrat, appeasing the right in a bid to appeal to the lowest common denominator. Chicago School of economics coupled with an incompetent cabinet.

We nonetheless can thank him for awakening the beast in the youth, and making them aware of what they want, even when he concedes it.
12:20 AM on 02/25/2010
Fanned !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Cause Endures
12:59 AM on 02/25/2010
Right back atcha, doc.
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NevadaLib
pwning cons since 2007
12:46 AM on 02/25/2010
very true. Obama promised us an FDR and gave us a clinton.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Cause Endures
12:59 AM on 02/25/2010
When we needed an FDR the most!
11:50 PM on 02/24/2010
Maybe a lot of the young people have come to the same conclusions about the dear leader as their parents have. He was and is a poser.
03:50 AM on 02/25/2010
I doubt that...Obama might still manage to salvage victory from defeats...But, he does need to gather some new advisers and listen to the people who sent him there. We do not want Republicans or libertarians...they are proven enemies of the Constitution and the USA....we wanted change...My parents just wanted to get by...
11:27 PM on 02/24/2010
OBAMA - Regain Democrat Youth Support-


---------------- > 1.) STICK TO CAMPAIGN PROMISES

-------------------- > 2.) QUIT KISSING THE GOP'S "BUMS IN SUMS!"
11:23 PM on 02/24/2010
I think there's a major difference between dwindling support of Democrats and increasing support of Republicans. As a 22 year old college student most of the people who I know that are dissatisfied with Obama and Democratic leadership has to do with the fact that they aren't liberal enough. But, we're also not stupid. Just because we aren't in love with how things are being handled does not mean that we will all of the sudden become Republicans nor does it mean that we're dumb enough to stay away from the polls, considering the alternative.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ECBA88
02:34 AM on 02/25/2010
exactly.
03:52 AM on 02/25/2010
That might be exactly what Obama's advisers are telling him...sadly, that almost guarantees there will be no change...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dbos
Single payer universal health insurance agent
11:16 PM on 02/24/2010
Listen Mr. President listen . You are responsible if the repugs takeover again we cant survive these people again.