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Voting

What's Next for Youth Turnout?

by: Charles Denson

Mon May 11, 2009 at 15:52:17 PM PDT

(cool! - promoted by torridjoe)

Young Oregonians have traveled far in the last eight years.  Our good friends at CIRCLE crunched the latest Census numbers and have this to say about youth turnout in 2008:

   * 18-29 year old turnout increased 11 percent nationally over 2004, while 30+ turnout increased only 3 percent.
   * 59.2% of eligible 18-29 year old Oregonians came out to vote, a 4.2 percentage point increase from 2004.  That's twice the national rate of 2 points.
   * Oregon youth voting rates are closing in on older voters.  In 2004, there was a 25 point difference in young and older turnout rates.  In 2008, there was only a 10.3 point difference.

A lot of people will chalk these numbers up to the Obama factor.  And, no doubt, President Obama's appeal had a lot to do with increasing turnout.  But, let's not forget that the underlying trendline for Oregon youth began in 2000, long before President Obama hit the national stage.  Between the 2000 and 2008 presidential elections, Oregon youth turnout increased by 11.2 points.

So let's be sure to acknowledge some of these other factors:

   * Young people have been volunteering in larger and larger numbers for over a decade.  Most of that volunteer work has been apolitical in nature, but community-minded in spirit.  So it is not surprising that youth interest in politics has increased as American elections have become narrower and the issues at stake closer to the hearts of young people.

   * The voter turnout work of the Oregon Student Vote Coalition have brought tens of thousands of new voters into the process.  For over a decade, hundreds of volunteers with the Oregon Student Association, OSPIRG and the Bus Project have combined old-fashioned pavement pounding with technology to reach the wired world of the young voter.  We used fun events like 'Trick or Vote' and data-driven techniques like canvassing, phone banking and text messaging to help voters register and vote.

Compared to the sub-50% rates of the 1990s, a 59.2% turnout rate is something to be proud of.  But we should still be doing better, especially among non-college age youth, which remain stubbornly low.

Modernizing our voter registration system can be the next big leap for boosting turnout.  Voter registration itself is simply a process to evaluate whether or not a resident is eligible to vote, and our still-paper-driven system should be upgraded to increase access, efficiency and save money.

One step forward is HB 2386, which would allow Oregonians to register to vote online.  Similar programs in Washington and Arizona have been very popular with voters.  Yet another step would be making registration permanent: the need for a voter to re-complete a voter registration form each time he or she moves is a considerable obstacle to having better participation rates.  Proactive registration would be yet another leap - using privacy-protected data from federal and state agencies to proactively determine an individual's voting eligibility, and potentially enfranchise large new segments of the population.

Discuss :: (1 Comments)

Prelude to Voter Suppression: Oregon's Right Claims Fraud In Voter Rolls

by: bdunn

Mon Dec 10, 2007 at 11:36:55 AM PST

I think an absolutely crucial story that we are ignoring at our own peril is the right wing's attack on our ability to register to vote. Last week announcement from OFIR and others attacking the validity of the voter rolls came out. Here is a choice bit of my analysis at Forward Oregon:

Last week, a group of Oregon's reactionary Right, including former State Rep. and Lars Larson lackey Jeff Kropf and Jim Ludwick, President of the xenophobic group Oregonians for Immigration Reform, declared war on the voter rolls. The danger of this group can not be underestimated as part of a systematic attempt to suppress voting, especially by young people.

And:

And like most young people, I don't even have a copy of my birth certificate, it is at home with my mom. Therefore, I would have to go to extraordinary means to be able to register to vote. Efforts like the Bus Projects' Building Votes, who registered 16,578 voters under 30 during the 2006 election cycle, increasing the Oregon youth electorate by 6%, would no longer be able to function. Registering people at civic events would be impossible as no one brings copies of these documents out with them on a Saturday.

So please go over to Forward Oregon and check it out. If we want to save our democracy, preventing this assault is crucial.

Discuss :: (17 Comments)

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