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Huffington Post—
December 20, 2011
The Real Story Behind
Headlines on Millennials
and Obama
By Morley Winograd and
Michael D. Hais
The headline of
a December 15 press
release from the Harvard
Institute of Politics
trumpeted, “More
Millennials Predict
Obama Will Lose Bid for
Re-election Than Win,
Harvard Poll Finds.” The
article elaborated that
among all the
18-29-year-olds, opinion
on this question is
actually quite evenly
divided into almost
equal thirds: 36%
believe that the
president
will lose in 2012; 30%
think he will win; and
32% are not sure. Not
surprisingly, conservative
media and politicians jumped
on the story with
particular vigor and
glee.
The headline was
certainly provocative,
but it hardly told the
complete story about the
Harvard poll’s results,
to say nothing of
Millennial political
attitudes and
preferences, entering
2012. The problem is
that asking Millennials
which candidate they
expect to win an
election may measure
their awareness of the
conventional wisdom that
says President Obama is
in deep trouble and that
next year’s election is
the Republicans to lose,
but it says very little
about how Millennials
are actually going to
vote in 2012. When
Harvard asked that
question directly,
things look different.
Obama leads among
Millennials by double
digits against all
likely Republican
opponents: 11 points
versus Mitt Romney and
16 points versus both
Newt Gingrich and Rick
Perry.
The current state of
Millennial Generation
(born 1982-2003)
political opinions and
behavior is, in fact,
reflected far more
completely and precisely
by a November
Pew Research survey:
“In the last four
national elections
generational differences
have mattered more than
they have in decades.
According to exit polls,
younger people have
voted substantially more
Democratic than other
age groups since 2004,
while older voters have
cast more ballots for
Republican candidates in
each election since
2006. The latest
national polls suggest
this pattern may well
continue in 2012… One of
the largest factors
driving the current
generation gap is the
arrival of diverse and
Democratic-oriented
Millennials… This group
holds liberal attitudes
on most social and
governmental issues.”
In the Pew research,
Millennials prefer
Barack Obama over Mitt
Romney (61% vs. 37%) by
about the same 2:1
margin that they voted
for him against John
McCain in 2008 (66% vs.
32%). Even white
Millennials, a cohort
that has received
considerable attention
from commentators in
recent months for their
modest drift toward the
GOP, are evenly divided
in the 2012 voting
preferences (49% each
for Obama and Romney).
The president’s margin
among Millennials is
even greater against
other potential
Republican nominees than
it is against Romney.
Moreover, Millennials
tended toward the
Democrats before Barack
Obama achieved national
prominence. Millennials
identify as Democrats
over Republicans by 50%
to 35%. Majorities of
Millennials also hold
favorable attitudes
toward the Democratic
Party (51%) and
unfavorable attitudes
toward the GOP (53%). In
the policy arena, by 56%
to 35%, Millennials
prefer a bigger
government that provides
more services to a
smaller government that
provides fewer services.
This broad belief in
governmental approaches
in dealing with economic
and societal issues is
reflected in the almost
2:1 preference of
Millennials for the
expansion rather than
the repeal of the 2010
health care reform
legislation (44% to 27%)
and for increased
spending to help
economic recovery rather
than reducing the budget
deficit (55% to 41%).
Millennials also hold
opinions on a range of
social issues that
incline the generation
toward the Democratic
Party and Barack Obama.
A majority of
Millennials (59%)
support the legalization
of gay marriage, while
only 28% of them agree
that America has gone
too far in pushing for
equal rights. Probably
because it is the most
diverse in U.S. history
(about 40% are nonwhite
and one in five have an
immigrant parent)
virtually all
Millennials (81%) favor
providing a pathway to
citizenship for
undocumented immigrants.
Of course, the
Millennial Generation’s
continued clear support
for Barack Obama and the
Democratic Party is not
a sure thing. Both the
president and his party
must convince
Millennials that they
can effectively use the
government to fix the
problems confronting
their generation and the
nation. But electoral
politics is a two-way
street. To win
Millennial support, the
Republican Party has to
persuade Millennials
that it and its
potential presidential
nominees are a viable
alternative. So far,
there is little in the
Pew research (or any
other poll) to suggest
that they have done much
to accomplish that
undertaking. If
anything, the GOP’s push
to the right on both
economic and social
issues makes that
increasingly unlikely.
In the end, the
Democrats’ biggest
Millennial concern is
not likely to be the
generation’s
partisanship or opinions
on issues, but its
political engagement.
The Pew survey indicates
that only 69% of
Millennials claim to
care a good deal about
who wins the presidency
in 2012. This compares
with over 80% among
older generations. At
the same time, a recent
Gallup Poll indicates
that the contentious
struggle for the
Republican presidential
nomination and the
performance of the
party’s leadership in
Congress may have taken
a toll on the Republican
Party and sharply
narrowed the “enthusiasm
gap” between the
Democrats and GOP.
As a result, the
participation of
Millennials is perhaps
even more crucial in
2012 than it was four
years earlier. In 2008,
the generation comprised
about 17% of the
electorate and accounted
for about 80% of Barack
Obama’s national popular
vote majority. In 2012,
as increasing numbers of
Millennials reach voting
age, they have the
potential to comprise
about a quarter of the
electorate. If
Millennials vote in
numbers proportionate to
their potential, their
continued support of the
president, as indicated
by Pew, will likely
allow him to overcome
any losses he suffers
among older voters. If
large numbers of
Millennials do not vote
or are prevented from
doing so by efforts in
states across the
country to limit
their turnout, the
president’s reelection
chances will be sharply
reduced.
The answers to those
questions, not any
current judgments on
which candidate is
likely to win, will very
likely determine whether
Barack Obama or his
eventual Republican
opponent is inaugurated
as president on January
20, 2013.
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