Get The Facts
The Problem:
Since gaining the right to vote in 1972, young people have been turning out to
vote in declining numbers. The low point came during the 2000 election,
one of the closest in United
States history, when less than half the
eligible 18- to 24-year-old population cast their ballots (36.1%).
We saw significant gains in the youth vote in 2004 when 47% of 18-24 year old
voters turned out, resulting in a remarkable increase of 11 percentage points
over 2000. In addition, the youth vote during the 2006 midterm elections saw measurable
growth of 4% over that of 2002.
Despite these recent increases, the hurdles to youth
voter participation have not been sufficiently cleared. Youth voting rates
remain substantially lower than those of older voters (66% in 2004), and the
majority of young people remain unconvinced that voting is an effective tool to
better their communities. We are making progress, but there is more work to be
done.
Why Don’t Young People Vote?
Surveys indicate
many reasons why young people aren’t voting. They feel it doesn’t make
a difference, they aren’t registered, they don’t have enough
information, or there isn’t enough time.
Two explanations for
low turnout rates among young people have been bringing social
scientists and practitioners together – one, that young people are
seldom the focus of campaign messages, and two, that they are rarely
the focus of person-to-person mobilization campaigns.
Studies by
Yale Political Science Professors Don Green and Alan Gerber suggest
that a large-scale peer-to-peer effort of voter contact targeted at
young people can make a significant difference in the turnout rate of
young voters, increasing youth turnout by 5 to 8 percentage points
among those registered voters who are contacted. However, in order to
conduct peer-to-peer contact operations and increase youth turnout on a
significant scale, it’s necessary to first increase the pool of
eligible voters, through a massive, targeted voter registration drive.
Before the 2004 election, only 50.7% of eligible 18-24 year olds were
registered to vote.
Why Young Voters Are Ignored:
Political
campaign strategies emphasize a focus on voters that 1) will have a
reliable voter turnout for a particular candidate, and 2) will be
likely to turn out and vote for that particular candidate. This has
been the conventional wisdom of campaigns for many years, and each year
as youth voter turnout declines, that rationale, and a vicious “cycle
of neglect,” are further perpetuated: because young people don’t vote,
campaigns feel they shouldn’t waste resources targeting young voters,
which only leads to continued disengagement of young voters. During the
2000 general election, for example, despite the $3 billion pumped into
the campaign economy by Democrats and Republicans, not even one
presidential campaign advertisement targeted young voters.
But
things are looking up. Of the approximately $4 billion spent in the
2004 election cycle, it’s estimated that $50 million was targeted
towards young voters – a mere fraction of the total dollars spent, but
the most ever targeted by organizations, political parties and
candidates towards young people. With an 11 percentage point increase
in turnout, it seems that those who spent resources on the youth vote
saw a significant return on their investment.
Why Young Voters Shouldn’t be Ignored:
Because
of the polarization of our nation’s electoral system, Republicans and
Democrats are each battling over a handful of swing voters. Voter
turnout and the discovery of “new” voters is more critical than ever.
Any candidate looking for marginal votes needed to win will find that
young voters – with the right approach – can easily become their “new”
voters.
This new generation of young people, Generation Y, is
different from their less-engaged older brothers and sisters of
Generation X. Studies by CIRCLE, Harvard University and MTV reveal that
Generation Y is paying greater attention to politics and is more
involved in their communities. Demographic projections indicate that a
decade from now this generation (which typically includes those
30-and-under) will make up 40% of the U.S. population. They could play
a critical role in deciding elections over the next decade – if they
continue to be politically engaged. Sixty-six million strong,
Generation Y is approaching the size of the Baby Boomers (77 million in
2000) - and they are a generation still deciding which political party
best represents them. Political parties and candidates stand to make
significant gains from any early connection they make with this
population.













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