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Are you listening, Mr. President? America’s young voters are living in childhood bedrooms, staring at fading Obama posters

by johndavis, August 30, 2012

WHERE ARE THE JOBS? Economic conditions leaving young electorate unemployed, disenchanted  “We’re no longer interested in Hope, Mr. President, we’re interested in having a future.”  The Rocky Mountain Collegian, August 28, 2012, The Student Voice of Colorado State University Since 1891  Thursday, August 30, 2012       Vol. V, No. 26      12:13 am Colorado State Student Newspaper
[More…]

WHERE ARE THE JOBS? Economic conditions leaving young electorate unemployed, disenchanted

 “We’re no longer interested in Hope, Mr. President, we’re interested in having a future.”  The Rocky Mountain Collegian, August 28, 2012, The Student Voice of Colorado State University Since 1891

 Thursday, August 30, 2012       Vol. V, No. 26      12:13 am

Colorado State Student Newspaper Greets Obama: WHERE ARE THE JOBS?

 On Tuesday, President Obama spoke to students at Iowa State University in Ames and Colorado State University in Ft. Collins, working to rekindle the same enthusiastic commitment to his candidacy that helped him win in 2008.  The challenge facing Obama with America’s youth can be seen on the front page of The Rocky Mountain Collegian, the campus newspaper at Colorado State.  “Where are the jobs?,” screams the headline.

Just below the headline is a picture of a student holding a sign reading, “College grad will work 4 food.”  The story notes that 51% of Colorado State grads in 2011 did not have jobs upon graduating.  What they did have was an average student loan debt of $22,017.

If that curt page one headline and picture was not a clear enough statement of student reservations about Obama’s worthiness of their support in 2012, the student-written editorial on the Collegian’s OUR VIEW page puts an end to any doubt.  Are you listening, Mr. President?

 Are you listening, Mr. President?

 The staff editorial, titled Are you listening, Mr. President?, reminds Obama that he was the first presidential candidate they were able to vote for and how he inspired them to believe that American politics would be different. “Unfortunately,” the students write, “it’s almost four years later and things look almost the same.”

Here is the stirring concluding paragraph in its entirety:

“President Obama has made great strides on some social issues and his administration did nab bin Laden, but securing the youth vote this election will take leadership and concrete legislation to balance the budget, prevent inflation and improve the economy.  We’re no longer interested in Hope, Mr. President, we’re interested in having a future.”

On August 15, 2012, the John Davis Political Report titled, Voter Enthusiasm/Volunteerism favoring Republicans in 2012 as Young American Voters facing 50% Underemployment No Longer Excited about Obama, stated that the young enthusiastic Obama voters from 2008 have not abandoned the cause of hope and change, they have become disenchanted with the leader of the cause.  “Without them, Obama cannot carry North Carolina in 2012,” I wrote. “Without them he cannot win a second term as President of the United States of America.”

 Living in childhood bedrooms, staring at fading Obama posters

 Today, President Obama wound up his two-day outreach to university students with an appearance in Charlottesville, Virginia, home to the University of Virginia.  In Ames, Ft. Collins and Charlottesville, the crowds were smaller than four years ago.  Although America’s youngest voters remain one of Obama’s most loyal constituencies, what’s missing is the enthusiasm.

With the loss of enthusiastic young voters, President Obama and the Democratic Party have lost their most reliable source of ground game volunteers.  Unemployed.  Disenchanted.

Tonight, Paul Ryan, presumptive GOP Vice Presidential nominee, brought down the house at the Republican National Convention in Tampa with the line, “College graduates should not have to live out their 20s in their childhood bedrooms, staring up at fading Obama posters and wondering when they can move out and get going with life.”

Time reported in March that an astounding 21.6% of Americans ages 25 to 34 are living with their parents.  That percentage represents 5.9 million young adults.  Six in 10 parents said they provide financial assistance to “adult children who are no longer students.”  Enthusiastic Obama volunteers?

No enthusiastic volunteers.  No voter registration advantage.  No turnout advantage.  No victory.

 – END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor


 

Premium Annual Subscription is $245.  Subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622.  P.S.:  Need a speaker?  Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel.  Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties.  Inquire about availability here.  JND


Voter Enthusiasm/Volunteerism favoring Republicans in 2012 as Young American Voters facing 50% Underemployment No Longer Excited about Obama

by johndavis, August 15, 2012

Voter Enthusiasm/Volunteerism favoring Republicans in 2012 as Young American Voters facing 50% Underemployment No Longer Excited about Obama “The Democratic advantage in net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 in North Carolina has plummeted from 54% to 19.5%.  The Republican share of net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 has increased
[More…]

Voter Enthusiasm/Volunteerism favoring Republicans in 2012 as Young American Voters facing 50% Underemployment No Longer Excited about Obama

“The Democratic advantage in net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 in North Carolina has plummeted from 54% to 19.5%.  The Republican share of net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 has increased from 6% to 24.6%”  John Davis Political Report, August 15, 2012

 Post: Wednesday, August 15, 2012       Vol. V, No. 25      12:13 pm

No Enthusiastic Volunteers.  No Victory.

This report is a continuation of the John Davis Political Report series on the structural deficiencies of the North Carolina Democratic Party, deficiencies that severely limit their ability to keep Republicans from dominating all branches of state government after the 2012 elections.

Thus far, I have written about the loss of political power, loss of the political fundraising advantage, loss of a majority of legislative and congressional districts, loss of strong leaders, loss of unity and the loss of the North Carolina business and agribusiness communities.  I consider the latter the greatest loss.  A statewide loss of influential leaders.  Contributions.

Today, I am adding the loss of enthusiastic young voters.  The Democratic Party has lost their most reliable source of ground game volunteers.  Unemployed.  Underemployed.

No enthusiastic volunteers.  No voter registration advantage.  No turnout advantage.  No victory.

 Hope and Change 2.0

According to a Gallup poll released July 25, only 39% of Democrats are “more enthusiastic about voting than usual,” compared to 51% of Republicans.  Gallup’s report used phrases like “Democratic voting enthusiasm down sharply” and “Democrats are significantly less” enthusiastic than in 2008.  Least enthusiastic: young unemployed/underemployed voters.

Daniel Henninger, The Wall Street Journal columnist, wrote an opinion piece on August 2, 2012 titled Hope and Change 2.0 in which he concluded that President Obama has “knocked four years of earning power off a lot of people’s lives,” especially young people.

Henninger noted a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll that found 18-to-34-year-old voters 19% below all voters in the country in expressing a “high interest in this year’s elections.”  He linked the loss of enthusiasm to the following economic nightmare:

  • Americans 18-to-24-years-old face nearly 16% unemployment; overall rate 8.3%
  • Associated Press study concludes that youth underemployment is 50%
  • Student debt is over $1 trillion per Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Time reported in March that an astounding 21.6% of Americans ages 25 to 34 are living with their parents.  That’s 5.9 million young adults.  Six in 10 parents said they provide financial assistance to “adult children who are no longer students.”  Enthusiastic Obama volunteers?

Youth employment in America is at a 60-year low according to an April 19, 2012 NPR story, Educated And Jobless: What’s Next For Millennials, “Only 55 percent of people ages 16 to 29 have a job — the lowest percentage since World War II.  New numbers out this week say people under 35 are worth 68 percent less than they were 25 years ago.”

The Obama campaign is counting on young enthusiastic volunteers to use a new online organizing site called Dashboard to “empower you to take on a major role in this campaign.”

I suspect that young voters will only become empowered when they get a job that allows them to move out of their parent’s home and begin paying their own way to their dreams.  Meanwhile …

No enthusiastic volunteers.  No voter registration advantage.  No turnout advantage.  No victory.

 Will NC GOP’s “Victory 2012” Beat Obama’s “Dashboard” Ground Game?

Obama carried North Carolina in 2008 because of a well organized and managed voter registration and turnout operation manned by enthusiastic young volunteers.  If Republicans take away that single advantage, or at least neutralize it, they will continue what they started in 2010: securing majority party status in all three branches of North Carolina state government.

The North Carolina Republican Party’s counter to the Obama camps “Dashboard” is “Victory 2012,” a joint voter registration and turnout operation backed by the state GOP, the Republican National Committee and the Mitt Romney presidential campaign.

“Victory 2012” now boasts 20 regional paid field directors and office locations.  “One Team, One Goal, One Victory,” the state GOP’s winning war cry from 2010, their most successful political year since 1896, now appears on everything coming out of state headquarters.

The Obama camp has twice as many headquarters in North Carolina as the GOP.  So, who is winning the battle for new voters in 2012?  And, how do the results to date compare to 2008?

Four years ago, January 2008 – August 2008, there were 316,746 net new voters registered:

  • 171,955 new Democrats (54%)
  • 20,363 new Republicans (6%)
  • 123,605 new Unaffiliated Voters (39%)
  • 823 new Libertarians (.03%)

From January 2012 through August 11, 2012, there were 179,011 net new voters registered:

  • 34,904 new Democrats (19.5%)
  • 44,019 new Republicans (24.6%)
  • 97,393 new Unaffiliated voters (55.9%)
  • 2,695 new Libertarians (.015%)

The Democratic advantage in net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 in North Carolina has plummeted from 54% to 19.5%.  The Republican share of net new registered voters in 2012 compared to 2008 has increased from 6% to 24.6%.

The young enthusiastic Obama voters from 2008 have not abandoned the cause of hope and change, they have become disenchanted with the leader of the cause.  Without them, Obama cannot carry North Carolina in 2012.  Without them he cannot win a second term as president of the United States of America.

No enthusiastic volunteers.  No voter registration advantage.  No turnout advantage.  No victory.

 – END –

Thank you for reading the John Davis Political Report

John N. Davis, Editor


 

Premium Annual Subscription is $245.  Subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622.  P.S.:  Need a speaker?  Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel.  Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties.  Inquire about availability here.  JND