Monday, November 17, 2008

The Youth Vote Won it for Obama

I have damned the youth vote for years. But I finally got a chance to look at the election numbers and how things were broken down and I think the youth may have strait up won the election for Obama.

Between 22 and 24 million young Americans ages 18–29 voted, resulting in an estimated youth voter turnout (the percentage of eligible voters who actually cast a vote) of between 49.3 and 54.5 percent, according to an exit poll analysis released Nov. 4 by CIRCLE, a nonpartisan research center at Tufts University. This is an increase of 1 to 6 percentage points over the estimated youth turnout in 2004, and an increase of between 8 and 13 percentage points over the turnout in the 2000 election. The all-time highest youth turnout was 55.4 percent in 1972, the first year that 18-year-olds could vote in a presidential election.

And 66% of that turnout was for Obama. That means that 14.52 million young voters picked Obama over McCain. Obama won the popular vote by 7.2 million. So you can say that all the Text messaging the VP candidate, the YouTube debates, and college outreach by the Obama campaign swayed this fickle of all voters his way.

It will be very interesting to see what this "what have you done for me lately" generation does when Obama fails to deliver his change message due to the bad economy. Hopefully they can stay with him through this difficult period because this generation has just elected their first President.

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