Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

blank

Updated News on the Keywords, youth vote + pennsylvania + democrats , Related to the Article Below:


Beaver County Times
Clinton's Campus Backers Resist Draw of `Cool' Obama Phenomenon
Bloomberg - Apr 17, 2008
In previous contests, however, younger, better educated and more liberal Democrats have preferred Obama, and Pennsylvania has 700000 college students on ...
April is month of political monotony, gridlock Case Western Reserve University Observer
Voters get chance to see Obama GoErie.com
Obama Should Answer Bitterness with Green Industrial Policy for ... Huffington Post
Mathaba.Net - Daily Pennsylvanian
all 2,772 news articles »
Push for youth vote stirs activism on campuses
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA - Apr 17, 2008
In Franklin and Marshall College's latest poll of Pennsylvania Democrats, voters 18 to 34 supported Obama by 55 percent to 36 percent, while older voters ...
The 'Obamican' Phenomenon
Yahoo! News - 12 hours ago
Before the March 24 registration deadline (only registered Democrats may vote in the April 22 primary), the Obama campaign made an all-out effort to convert ...

CTV.ca
Political Election Betting - Dems Favored? Not So Fast
BetUs.com, Canada - Apr 17, 2008
What I've noticed is that the biggest card the Democrats have to play against McCain is not the juxtaposition of Obama's youth (46) against McCain's ...
Why Hillary will get my vote in both April and November SRU The Online Rocket (subscription)
all 1,213 news articles »

The Associated Press
Pitched Contest for Pa. Youth Vote
The Associated Press - Apr 6, 2008
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are hustling for the youth vote in Pennsylvania as if they've never heard this is a state where ...
Power of youth
Centre Daily Times, PA - Apr 13, 2008
In Pennsylvania, voters younger than 35 now make up a quarter of the state?s registered Democrats. ?It?s about a movement,? said Chrissy Faessen, ...
Rocking the vote?
Connellsville Daily Courier, PA - Apr 9, 2008
Cominsky said it takes a remarkable candidate to get the youth to turn out and vote. Franklin D. Roosevelt did with the Democrats in the 1930s and 1940s, ...
While McCain Watches
Wall Street Journal - Apr 17, 2008
It is his youth, his relative untriedness, the fact that he has not suffered, been seasoned, been beat about the head by life and left struggling back, ...
John Baer: In Dem primary, will youth vote make the difference?
Philadelphia Daily News, PA - Apr 11, 2008
The problem is that pollsters have a tough time measuring, even finding, the youth vote. Realities of life: Older people tend to be home and answer the ...
Guest Opinion: Obama could boost youth vote to new high
Billings Gazette,  USA - Apr 13, 2008
A surge in the youth vote for Obama could make Montana a battleground state. Can the Democrats break the Republican presidential lock on the Treasure State? ...
   
   

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are competing for the youth vote in Pennsylvania as if they have never heard this is a state where the old hold sway.

Campuses in the cities and mountainsides are alive with political activism, stirred most notably by Obama in student registration drives aimed at replicating his success with young voters dating to the Iowa caucuses that he won in January to leadoff the primary season.

How motivated are his youthful supporters? So motivated that Alyssa Beasley, 20, endured an encounter with the Department of Motor Vehicles so she could switch her driver's license from New Jersey and register to vote at the same time.

And how high are their expectations? In Beasley's case, very.

"I feel like my entire hope and dream for America lies on this man's shoulders," she said on the tree-lined campus of the Jesuit-run University of Scranton.

That heady courtship is matched by a vigorous effort on Clinton's side. Altogether, the April 22 primary is becoming more of a can't-miss event for the young instead of just another why-bother one on the political calendar.

Doug Jones, 19, got so caught up in the excitement that he registered as a Democrat to vote for Clinton, even though he will probably vote Republican in the fall.

"I'm not doing it out of sneaky and scheming motives to down the Democratic nominee," said the University of Scranton student. "I'd like to take part in the process."

Pennsylvania ranks third in the nation in the percentage of people 65 and older, a group that has favored Clinton elsewhere and appears strong for her here.

Obama is counting on a big showing from the state's nearly 700,000 college students on more than 150 campuses.

The Illinois senator has received the support of about 60% of voters aged 18-24 in competitive states, exit polls indicate, and his advantage with that group does not appear to be waning in Pennsylvania.

The question is whether that will be enough to prevail in a state where polls have found Clinton consistently ahead, if by shrinking margins.

"We have a long way to go in Pennsylvania and maximizing the votes of young voters is critical if we're going to be able to close the gap," said Sean Smith, an Obama spokesman.

Pennsylvania makes voting easy for students from other states because it only requires 30 days residency to register. However, no one who voted in an earlier primary elsewhere can vote again here.

Mia Prensky, 21, of Harrisburg, said Obama supporters have been on her campus at Bryn Mawr College — a women's school with stone buildings nestled in Philadelphia's wealthy Main Line — handing out stickers, distributing information about the Iraq war and encouraging students to vote. They struck a chord with her.

"I still don't really like the fact that Hillary voted for the war," she said.

In Philadelphia, where more than 100,000 college students live, Obama volunteers with voter registration forms in hand have been on campuses and at train stations around Philadelphia's bustling University City district, encouraging their peers to register.

Among them was Seth Dean, 23, a University of Pennsylvania student who said he decided in January to register as a Democrat in Pennsylvania. At home in Florida, he was a registered independent.

"I kind of thought from the beginning it was going to be kind of a long, drawn-out fight and it might come down to Pennsylvania, so I just made a tactical decision," Dean said.

Aside from Obama's strong base among black voters, young voters are probably his strongest group, said Scott Keeter, director of survey research for the Pew Research Center.

"I cannot recall another candidate in the past couple of decades that had such consistent support from young people," Keeter said.

A recent Quinnipiac University poll found Obama leading Clinton 51% to 42% among likely Democratic voters ages 18-44 in Pennsylvania, but trailing nine points overall.

Obama's campaign ran an ad in Pittsburgh and Harrisburg before the state's March 24 registration deadline aimed at drumming up new young voters. It cited his opposition to the Iraq war and his plan to help loan-burdened college students.

Additional efforts by Obama to reach young voters in Pennsylvania include a text messaging program that allows supporters to communicate with each other and receive information about events, campaign spokesman Smith said.

Facebook co-creator Chris Hughes has been in the state training people how to use the social networking site for outreach, Smith said. In all, the campaign has more than 50 student chapters in Pennsylvania.

During a recent Obama rally at Penn State University in State College, more than 20,000 people crowded onto a campus lawn to see him, many of them students wrapped in blankets against the cold.

Clinton's campaign also is pursuing younger voters with registration drives, rallies and about 30 student groups. "Ugly Betty" star America Ferrera is among the celebrities who have campaigned in Pennsylvania for Clinton, as has the New York senator's daughter, Chelsea, who frequently speaks at college campuses.

The campaign says it is reaching young people who are not in college as well as students.

One of them is Ashley Langdon, 23, a waitress in Allentown who said she would like to go to college but cannot afford it. Langdon said she is hypoglycemic and has struggled to pay emergency room bills because she does not have health insurance.

"She has the experience and the knowledge to help clean it up a little bit better, rather than Obama," Langdon said of Clinton.

"He's kind of new. He's fresh. He's got outstanding ideas, but who knows what's going to happen?"

More than 235,000 people have registered as Democrats in Pennsylvania since last year. State authorities estimate nearly 10% of the 4 million registered Democrats are ages 18-24 and about 20% are 65 or older.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted
E-mail | Save | Print |
To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.
University of Scranton student Doug Jones, 19, said although he will probably vote Republican in Nov., the excitement surrounding the Democratic race spurred him to register with the party so he could vote in the upcoming primary.
By Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP
University of Scranton student Doug Jones, 19, said although he will probably vote Republican in Nov., the excitement surrounding the Democratic race spurred him to register with the party so he could vote in the upcoming primary.

 

 

 

 

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com

Search inside Iconocast for the keyword you have in mind.

Iconocast has collected more than 50,000 articles and press releases on health and science.

These are current and most up to date press releases on the subject you are searching.

We collect current health and science press releases daily from more than 5000 research and health institutes. Here is an example : The elderberry way to perfect skin

We believe if you do search inside Iconocast, you will get better results than searching the web alone.

 
 
Continue News With: News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

Contact Iconocast

Iconocast Health Articles

© 2003-07. ICONOCAST is a trademark of iconocast.com.