Posted on 04/26/2007 8:48:11 AM PDT by liberty1971
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and U.S. Senator Barack Obama are first choice among 18-24 year-olds for President in 2008 according to the Harvard Institute of Politics 12th Biannual Youth Survey on Politics and Public Service. Young people who said they were most likely to vote in a Republican caucus or primary placed Senator John McCain as a second choice and Governor Mitt Romney in third. In contrast, Democrat young people placed Senator Hilary Clinton in second, and in third place Senator John Edwards.
Poll results also show that President Bushs approval rating continues to drop with the 18-24 year-old age group, less then 31% say they approve of the job George W. Bush is doing as President, and nearly 59% say the country is on the wrong track. Young Republicans are also voicing the same opinion with 39% agreeing that the country is off on the wrong track.
So what is the number one issue on the minds of young voters? Fifty percent answered the open- ended question by saying Iraq (29%), the War (14%), the War on Terror (4%), or domestic security (3%). After these issues, there is no other single issue that gained more than 6 percent of the vote.
When asked the question, What should the United States do now? about the situation in Iraq, nearly six in ten (58%) 18-24 year-olds favor either decreasing the U.S. troops (29%) or removing them all from the country (29%). Two in ten young people favor increasing the troops (11%) or maintaining current troop levels (9%) in Iraq.
Nearly 17% of 18-24 year-olds answered the multiple choice question, Which of the following do you think should be the next foreign policy priority for President Bush? by choosing the genocide in Darfur, Sudan. The surveyors of the study said they included the question to see the relative importance of Darfur compared to other foreign policies. Stabilizing Iraq is clearly the dominant issue across the board, ranking number one, but Darfur placed second above fighting the war on terror, dealing with China as growing superpower, relations with Israel, and Irans nuclear energy program.
But not all issues on young peoples minds pertain to foreign policy. Fifty-three percent of young people polled said religious values should NOT play a more important role in government. Meanwhile, 60% of the same group said they are concerned about the moral direction of the country.
Much has changed in the process of politics and young Americans since Harvard first conducted this study back in 2000. Seven years ago there was a cycle of record low turn-out at the voting booths and a major disconnect between young Americans and the political process, the IOP study reports.
In the past, young people are remarkably cynical about politics, said David King, Director of Research at Harvards Institute of Politics. But things are changing, he claims. Young people helped propel Jim Webb (VA) and John Tester (MT) into the Senate. Its crystal clear when you look at the data they won because of the youth vote.
In the last seven years young people have witnessed 9/11, the beginning of the war in Iraq, threats of global warming, all of which has engaged a lot more young people to get involved and participate in the political process. Voter turnout among 18-24 year-olds in the United States has grown around 31%, from 36% in the 2000 presidential election to 47% in the 2004 election.
The IOP survey was completed by polling 2,923 18-24 year-olds with an online questionnaire. To make sure the final result totals are representative of the overall 18-24 year-old population, 1,440 of the 2,923 were current college undergraduates and 1,483 were not currently enrolled in a four-year college.
Other interesting demographics of those polled include: 51% male, 49% female; 64% white, 17% Hispanic, 13% Black; 37% say that religion is a very important part of their life; 75% say they are registered to vote; 35% consider themselves Democrat, 24% Republican and 40% Independent; 89% own a cell phone; 64% have a MySpace account and 75% of college students have a Facebook account.
The study was conducted using Harris Interactive, the 12th largest and fastest growing market research firm in the world. The poll was fielded between March 8 and March 26, 2007 and has a sampling error of +/3 percentage points.
Wendy Cook is a staff writer at Accuracy in Academia.
Remind me again how many of them actually vote?
I’m 21 and I’m proud to say I’m not included in that.
“Remind me again how many of them actually vote?”
Few and THAT is why no one should care what the young think about politics, for the most part.
The Joe Francis vote ?
This kids are mostly liberals, but most of them said they would vote for Rudy over anybody, even Obama.
I’m 22 and i support Fred Thompson...Wouldn’t that be the day?
Many 18-24 year-olds drink deeply of the liberal Kool-Aid.
This just proves that kids are ignorant about liberals in EITHER party organization.
I didn’t develop an interest in politics or voting until I was in my late 30s. I had opinions about politics but they were mostly uninformed and useless due to the fact that I wasn’t willing to actually vote.
That's because she IS an opportunist that will say anything!.......
“If your are not liberal when your are young, then you have no heart. If you are not conservative when you are old, then you have no brains.”.....Sir Winston Churchill........
Choosier kids choose Jiff.
When I was in that age bracket I thought I knew it all. Now I know I didn't know anything about anything.
Must be something in the Red Bull.
Welcome to FR, liberty.
I have a scurrilous Rudy G. limerick.
Would you like to see it?
I’m sure I was the rarity when I registered to vote on my 18th birthday which was 2 weeks after I started college in 1978. I registered there, on campus, and voted there.
This, of course, can change after the all-important “boxers or briefs?” question is posed to the candidates.
Sit around and talk to a group of 18 - 24 years olds and you quickly learn that they still have crap for brains at that point.
Let them stew in life and reality and not high school and college for awhile then HOPEFULLY they gain some smarts.
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