Archive for January, 2008
The College Campaign
Posted by Paul on January 9, 2008
I thought I would share an article that has several quotes from me on the front page of the Wilmington News Journal Jan. 8. It’s about youth activism.
The college campaign
Candidates are increasingly aiming at young people, and they’re responding
A University of Delaware student from Chicago, Paul Ruiz couldn’t directly participate in last week’s Iowa caucus. But he and other Barack Obama supporters called dozens of Iowa college students to lobby for Obama, helping the Illinois senator win last week’s Iowa caucuses.
“Hey, you’re a student, we’re students and we think this guy Barack Obama is very inspirational,” was the pitch from Ruiz, 20. “We think he’s great, so maybe you’re interested in him.”
Victories in Iowa by Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee were said to have been fueled by increased turnout among voters ages 18 to 29, who represented more than a fifth of the vote.
College students rallying for politicians isn’t new, but the stakes are much higher this time around. Young people crave a candidate who talks about change but also one who inspires them — think TV’s Jed Bartlet on “The West Wing.” And they have the high-tech tools, such as YouTube and Facebook, to hype them.
And all eyes are on today’s New Hampshire primary to see if this drive by young voters will be a force throughout the election.
“In the past, campaigns ignored us and then wondered why we didn’t go out to vote,” said Ruiz, a sophomore political science and criminal justice major. “It’s incredibly significant to have a campaign that does focus on students, that has students excited. You can’t do that with any candidate. You need an exciting figure … someone who can promise what’s not the status quo.”
Although historically the least represented group of voters, turnout among men and women 18 to 29 jumped 9 percent from 2000 to 2004. Turnout among young voters in 2004 was the third-highest since 1972, said Karlo Marcelo, a research associate for the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning & Engagement. The nonpartisan group studies youth civic engagement.
The larger numbers of young men and women at the polls wasn’t due to a jump in any one demographic, Marcelo said, but due to across-the-board increases in 18- to 29-year-olds from all genders, races and socioeconomic groups.
“What’s cool about 2004 is it was everybody — every single kind of young person you can think of got more involved in the election,” Marcelo said. “In the 2008 election what’s different now, and it was highlighted by Obama and Huckabee coming out as winners in Iowa, is you’ve got people talking about the straight talkers, the people who aren’t really into spinning their audience around.”
College students who participated in a CIRCLE survey released on Election Day last year said they were interested in becoming involved but were turned off by partisan and confrontational politics.
Although they name the environment, education and health care as issues of concern, Delaware students said a candidate’s overall persona is the most important factor in earning their votes.
John McCain’s “willingness to say things other politicians aren’t willing to say” was one of the reasons Michael Brickman is spending his winter break from UD working for the Arizona senator’s campaign. Brickman, from Milwaukee, has been in New Hampshire since Christmas Eve, making phone calls, attending rallies and trying to rally voters.
The sounds of a rally at the New Hampshire state capitol building in Concord could be heard faintly in the background as Brickman recalled a recent town hall meeting where McCain allowed a combative audience member to not only ask a question but make several rebuttals until he was satisfied with the senator’s answer.
“It made a big impact on me and made me want to redouble my efforts to support him,” Brickman, 21, said.
Getting the word out
Reporters from all over the world also are in New Hampshire to cover the primary. But students don’t need to buy a newsmagazine or flip on CNN to follow the election. Candidates and their supporters are blogging, creating MySpace profiles and using Facebook to get the word out.
Facebook, which has a Delaware Students for Obama group, made it easy to find UD students and to target those who hailed from states holding early caucuses and primaries, Ruiz said.
“On Facebook you can plan events, and you can get a lot of people to go to these events,” he said. “That increases visibility on campus, and when your campus visibility is increased … that motivates people who aren’t on Facebook.”
UD freshman Obi Nwabara, 18, thinks tools such as Web sites and YouTube videos allow candidates to draw attention to themselves, but he finds some of their attempts “kind of gimmicky.”
Information on the Internet helped UD senior Anna Field, 21, choose Republican candidate Ron Paul, who she calls “a true conservative.”
“I went directly to his Web site and read about the issues,” said Field, a senior from Wilmington. “I always look for what is their position on abortion, because I’m pro-life, and what their view is on Iraq, because I believe pulling out the troops now is not a good idea.”
Although media reports have a lot to say about how Hillary Clinton’s gender, Obama’s race and Mitt Romney’s religion may affect the election, Delaware State University senior Phillip Davis hopes voters look beneath the surface.
“Vote for the best candidate that suits the things that you need, the things that you really want to see get accomplished,” said Davis, who is president of DSU’s College Democrats. “Don’t vote for a president because of being a woman or because of being a black man or because of being a Mormon. Vote for someone who will enhance America’s opportunity to become a stronger, more developed, more global nation.”
Contact Rachel Kipp at 324-2386 or rkipp@delawareonline.com.
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