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  1. #1
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    VYING FOR THE YOUTH VOTE




    Student of Oceanside signs up students to support Democratic candidates at Cal State San Marcos' Forum Plaza on Tuesday. Her efforts were part of a big countrywide and countywide push to court young voters.

    Skip wrote on Feb 3, 2008 12:16 PM:

    That girl in the accompanying picture looks like she is wearing a real flag. That is so disrespectful. I have said it many times before, " What are they teaching those kids at Cal State San Marcos?" And on the California taxpayers dime.

    Vying for the youth vote


    By: ZACH FOX - Staff Writer
    February 3, 2008

    Student activists hope exciting candidates lure more of their peers to the polls

    As presidential candidates court the growing number of young voters, Stephanie Dezee just wants to get more of her peers to care.

    Campus activists like Cal State San Marcos' Dezee say college students are split between the traditionally apathetic and the recently passionate ---- sparked by a few nontraditional candidates and an unpopular war.

    "If you ask a general student, they couldn't tell you the date of when to go vote in the primary," said Dezee, a 23-year-old Oceanside resident who volunteers for the Democratic Party. "But from what I've noticed, there is more enthusiasm and interest in this campaign."

    Campaigns for candidates of every political stripe are targeting the historically unreliable 18- to 24-year-old voting bloc, though whether that effort will pay off won't be known for some time. That hasn't stopped the campaigns from turning to the Internet with hopes of nabbing those votes.

    Social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook have huge traction on college campuses, boasting millions of users.

    Facebook, especially, has the potential to allow popular candidates to snowball.

    It has a "news feed" function that informs users of their friends' actions, including posting support for a particular presidential candidate.

    Campaigns have recognized the power of such sites and look to take advantage.

    "I barely know any students that don't have Facebook," said Brian Pepin, a 2007 San Diego State graduate and volunteer for Mitt Romney's campaign. "It's really easy to post up on there, 'I'm a Mitt Romney supporter,' and have all your friends see it."

    Practically all of the presidential campaigns have created profiles on the site, and Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., has dominated the Facebook race.

    As of Friday, Obama boasted 323,700 supporters on Facebook, almost four times Hillary Clinton's second-best total. Ron Paul leads all Republicans with 80,562. Facebook users add themselves as supporters to the candidates' profile with the click of a mouse, allowing the campaigns to send messages and track likely voters.

    Over 24 hours last week, Obama's Facebook profile gained more than 12,000 supporters.

    On UC San Diego's most congested pedestrian walkway on Thursday afternoon, Obama supporters significantly outnumbered those of other campaigns.

    Six or seven volunteers for Obama competed for the attention of passers-by against a sole supporter of Mike Huckabee and two Hillary Clinton volunteers.

    In this more traditional approach to campaigning, the volunteers tried to interest fellow students in their candidates' political views as well as their stickers and other paraphernalia.

    Obama volunteers at the La Jolla campus had students sign pledge cards, which added their names and contact information to a database that volunteers said will remind them to vote. "Blitzing," as they called it, in front of a row of vendors shilling everything from knockoff designer sunglasses to kettle corn, the Obama supporters said his message of change and infectious charisma are the means of attraction for college students.

    "I've never had this much confidence in a candidate. I've never been this excited about a candidate, and I've been involved in politics for a long time," said Shereen Nourollahi, a 20-year-old biology major from Escondido. "I've been amazed about the positive feedback from people. When we ask, 'Do you support Barack Obama?' people cheer and holler."

    Nourollahi transferred to UCSD from Palomar College and said the student body at the larger college is much more politically active than at Palomar, which she called a commuter college where more students live at home and avoid becoming involved with campus life.

    On campus or online, volunteers with other campaigns weren't close to conceding the younger vote to Obama.

    "The students I've met believe that Mitt Romney is the best man to run this country," Pepin said. "They understand how important it is to have someone with his beliefs."

    The lone Huckabee volunteer on campus said the former Arkansas governor is the most attractive Republican candidate for young voters, something he has seen in campaigning.

    "I think the main thing is (Huckabee's stance on) the Fair Tax," said Alec Weisman, a UCSD freshman studying ecology. "Most of us are sick of being taxed over and over. Just getting taxed on your income and then getting hit with the corporate tax. And with him, it's more than talk; he's had action as a governor."

    A volunteer with Clinton's campaign said she thought a lot of students lean toward the former first lady's experience over Obama's promise of change.

    "I think young people are extremely attracted to her message. I think it's a misconception that (Obama is) the candidate for young people," said Yoyo Chan, a 19-year-old international studies major at UCSD. "I feel almost like he's the trendy candidate and some people are voting for him just because their friends are."

    But Dezee, at Cal State San Marcos, said her support for Clinton was secondary to her main goal in campaigning on campus: simply encouraging students to vote.

    John Baden, campaigning for Obama at Cal state San Marcos, agreed. He graduated last year with a degree in history but remains involved in an effort to increase political awareness.

    "We have to make the whole process fun for people and get away from the negativity," Baden said. "When it turns into two people bickering, young people, especially, tune out."

    The San Diego County Democratic Party has also made a push this year to get college students to vote, regardless of political affiliation.

    In campaign drives at San Diego State University and UCSD, the Democrats registered more than 1,500 people, mostly students, said Jess Durfee, chairman of the county organization.

    The Republican Party of San Diego County did not have any registration drives on college campuses, instead focusing its efforts on districts, said Jonathan Buettner, chief operating officer of the organization.

    But whether the young voters the parties are vying for will actually play a major role in the primary remains to be seen.

    Many analysts thought younger voters would play a major role in the 2004 presidential election. But though there was a roughly 10 percent increase in youth participation that year, their impact was diluted because overall voting turnout also surged, said Richard Brake, director of the New York-based Intercollegiate Studies Institute's Lehrman American Studies Center.

    "I think it's always a mistake, until it's proven wrong, to spend more money courting the youth vote than spending money courting the elderly vote," Brake said. "Just because the elderly are more likely going to vote."

    If Obama secures the nomination, Brake said, he expects younger voters to flood the polls in November.

    "College kids gravitated to (John) Kennedy, and that was a generational election," he said. "You get those every once in a while, and if Obama is the candidate, this is setting up to be one of those years."

    Contact staff writer Zach Fox at (760) 740-5412 or zfox@nctimes.com.


    http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2008/02 ... 2_2_08.txt

    Comments On This Story

    Note: Comments reflect the views of readers and not necessarily those of the North County Times or its staff.

    It's the "Democrat" party wrote on Feb 3, 2008 12:05 AM:

    And younger voters have, typically been

    1: Horrendously unreliable.

    2: Seriously Naive.

    Relying on young voters is like relying on the illiterate and easily confused, which is what cost Al Gore the 2000 election, thanks to them voting for Pat Buchanan.

    P.S. The 1960 election was stolen, courtesy of the dead voting in Chicago, not won by some horde of idealistic youngsters.

    Tuck wrote on Feb 3, 2008 7:00 AM:
    If voting actually changed things, it would be illegal.

    Noble, but.. wrote on Feb 3, 2008 9:36 AM:
    I want to know why my Colors are being used as clothing and being allowed to touch the ground.

    A picture tells everything... wrote on Feb 3, 2008 9:53 AM:
    This picture of the disrespect for the flag of our nation speaks volumes for how this generation has no idea what they're voting for nor for whom? Our flag is not a blanket to be worn in the rain! This is a standard that many men have died for a belief in something to be protected. These politicians are relying on the lack of love for a nation that stands to defend it's people. These democrats say "We'll pull the troops out...but what will stop the hordes from reaching our shores then? These young ARE NOT the future!!! We stand and fight them enemy now!!! They're more of us older loyal americans than there ever will be them!!! And most of all we respect even in the smallest way the symbol that represents this the greatest nation of all.

    No, it's the "Democratic" Party. wrote on Feb 3, 2008 10:41 AM:
    This "Democrat" Party nonsense is a right-wing attempt to change the correct usage. Wouldn't want anyone to think Republicans are less democratic than anyone else. (Might help if they stopped trampling our Constitution and civil rights.)

    I think it's great that young people of all political persuasions are getting involved in the process.

    Go Obama!!!

    Period wrote on Feb 3, 2008 10:55 AM:
    The Democratic party was the pro-slave party. I like history!!!

    Matthew wrote on Feb 3, 2008 10:59 AM:
    To "Noble, but": YOUR colors? Hahaha.

    Skip wrote on Feb 3, 2008 12:16 PM:
    That girl in the accompanying picture looks like she is wearing a real flag. That is so disrespectful. I have said it many times before, " What are they teaching those kids at Cal State San Marcos?" And on the California taxpayers dime.

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  2. #2

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    Youth vote has been reported by media to be king makers in 4 elections from 1968 till today -Hubert Humphrey and George Mcgovern were going to be put in office by the hippies,anti -war ,etc in the largest group og young voters evr because of the baby boom generation.In 2000 MTV was going to Rock the vote for Gore.Last in 2004 ,Howard Dean once again supposely brought out massive young voters.In the end ,none of these people won.Saying something over and over does not make it happen but in the minds of the media they like to think thier influence and loud shouts will make it different this time.

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    .

    gross.

  4. #4
    girl's Avatar
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    q2

    `sw.fkjhsdf;oahwe;faklsndjf;oi23u4pl98eaos;ihfj

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