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| Also listed in: Campus Progress Blog |
Young Americans appear to lean slightly more to the left than the general population: 28 percent described themselves as liberal, compared with 20 percent of the nation at large. And 27 percent called themselves conservative, compared with 32 percent of the general public.
Forty-four percent said they believed that same-sex couples should be permitted to get married, compared with 28 percent of the public at large. They are more likely than their elders to support the legalization of possession of small amounts of marijuana.
This would seem to suggest, as I've argued before, that Democrats would be wise to take more forthrightly progressive stances on questions like gay marriage and reforming our draconian drug crime laws. Young people are voting in greater numbers than ever before, and they're open to sensible policies that were heretofore off-limits to mainstream politicians.
cross-posted on TAPPED
The poll was widely discussed across the blogosphere, but one thing nearly every blogger, from BenAdler to Ezra Klein to the folks at MyDD, Kos and HuffPost neglected to address was that "Millenials/Generation Y/whatever you call us" are more optimistic that the "U.S. will succeed in Iraq" (the poll's words, not mine).
Everyone seems to highlight his or her favorite nugget from the poll. Ben here, perhaps, wants to get down with sticky green legally so he points out young folks' support for legalizing marijuana. Ezra has this crazy obsession with people getting healthcare so he posts a graph showing 17-29 yos' support for one health insurance program administered by the government and paid for by taxpayers.
Selective bias like this is nothing new in fair and balanced, objective journalism. Guess it's not going away anytime soon either.