The Kids are Alright
Bad? Brilliant?
You can rate this post.
Register or login now and
tell us what you think.
Here at the Center, I just heard a presentation from the Harvard Institute of Politics detailing the results of their most recent survey of 18 to 24-year olds. There was lots of encouraging news: Today’s young people are more likely than any other generation since the Vietnam era to vote and engage with politics, but are under-counted because exit polls tend to ignore campus polling places. On foreign policy, 75 percent of 18 to 24 year olds believe the United Nations, not the U.S., should take the lead in responding to international conflicts. And young people are positive about the cultural effects of globalization, but are more skeptical about its economic and environmental outcomes. Here are some other highlights from the survey:
  • Young Democrats are more independent of their elders than young Republicans are. Like their older counterparts, 18-24 year old Republicans prefer Rudy Giuliani as the next president. But while older Democrats support Hillary Clinton (42% to Obama’s 24% and Edwards’ 17%), young Democrats prefer Obama (35% to Clinton’s 29% and Edwards’ 9%).
  • Dovetailing nicely with Ronald Brownstein’s Obama-skeptic analysis of “beer track” and “wine track” Democratic candidates (the six-packers make more likely winners), Obama is more popular among the highly educated. Obama leads Clinton by only 3 points among 18-24 year olds not enrolled in a 4-year college, but by a whopping 17 points on campuses.
  • And don’t discount gender. Obama leads Clinton by 20% among young Democratic men, but young Democratic women prefer Clinton by 6 points.
Cross-posted at TAPPED.

Reader Comments

Comments are closed for this post.

  
Sounds good, but...
By Christy Apr 18th 2007 at 11:44 pm EDT
...apparently they didn't ask the people on my campus (St. Mary's College of MD). Many of the students here are really apathetic. True most of them vote on election day, but they do not otherwise engage in politics.
For example, when the 2000th US soldier died in Iraq we had a candlelight vigil, and of our 1800 college students only 50 showed up.
And even if we get some people together to go to a protest, it's always only a few who go.
I don't understand how anyone can not care what is going on in their country and in the world!
  
Campus Progress

Please remember that Campus Progress' terms of use do not allow promoting or endorsing any particular political party or candidate for office. Posts or comments that do this will be deleted.

Campus Progress