One consideration to add to what Michael Medved says in the following  
article
is that in both Obama elections the young cast their ballots for him on the 
 basis
of belief, hope, or even worship, cie vous plait. There has been  nothing 
comparable
in the democratic Party since McGovern, and in comparison, 
McGovern was weak tea.
.
Can this phenomenon be repeated after Obama ?  Nothing is  impossible
in politics,  but 2010 may provide a reasonable look at the youth  vote
post-BHO. That year, Obama,  not on the ticket, they stayed  home.
.
Not sure what the solution to the problem is. My own view, of course, is  
that 
Obama sold the under 30 set a bill of  goods that they were eager  to buy
because of how he looks, viz, youthful, and a representative of  
"diversity." 
And because of a number of his political stands, stands based on , in  many
particulars, an utterly false view of the problems facing us as a  nation.
.
Which is not some kind of endorsement of the Republicans. This was one  more
"lesser of two evils" election. Like many others who cast ballots for the  
GOP ticket,
I wasn't very happy with Romney during the election campaign and am even  
less
happy with him now. Could Obama have been defeated had the  Republicans
nominated a better candidate ?  That should be obvious. But the more  
important
question is :  Will the young stay "liberal" ?
.
Something has to be done to change the popular culture. This is the main  
task.
 For unless that culture changes  --this means Hollywood, the  music biz,
literature, education in the broad sense, Broadway theater, etc--
the young will continue to imbibe bad liquor by the gallon.
.
That's the real problem.
.
Billy
.
.
=============================================
 
 
 
Daily Beast
 
 
The  Not-So-Liberal American Future
Dec 2, 2012 4:45 AM EST  
 

Young Obama voters will stay Democrats all their  lives. That’s the latest 
liberal argument—but statistics showing many maturing  voters turn 
conservative, plus our aging population, should give Republicans  hope, says 
Michael 
Medved. 


 
Does ideology shape life experience, or does life experience determine  
ideology? The future direction of American politics depends on our  response.
 
In response to the disappointing results of November’s elections, I _have  
argued_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/11/28/forget-2012-long-term-demographic-trends-favorable-to-republicans.html)
  that conservatives 
should take heart from the undeniable aging of the  electorate, which will 
tilt future contests toward Republicans. 2012 exit polls  showed Mitt Romney 
sweeping voters 65 and older in a 12-point landslide, and  among all those 
above age 30 (81 percent of the voting public) the Republican  nominee 
prevailed by a solid margin. President Obama won the overall vote solely  on 
the 
strength of his crushing 60-to-36 advantage with the 18-to-30 crowd. If  
official projections prove accurate, low birthrates and rising life expectancy  
will produce a much higher percentage of elderly Americans in the electorate,  
conferring a significant edge for conservative candidates in future close  
elections.
 
But Democrats hope that young Obama enthusiasts will maintain their  
overwhelmingly liberal orientation even as they grow older and their life  
circumstances change. In a _provocative piece for New York magazine_ 
(http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/11/generation-d-americas-liberal-future.html)
  that 
calls  conservatives “doomed,” Jonathan Chait argues that the president’s 
support from  young voters in the last two election cycles went “beyond the 
usual  reasons—social issues like gay marriage and feminism, immigration policy 
or  Obama’s personal appeal—and suggest a deeper attachment to liberalism. 
The  proclivities of younger voters may actually portend a full-scale sea 
change in  American politics.” He goes on to cite a Pew survey suggesting that 
“Americans  form a voting pattern early in their life and tend to hold to 
it.” 
 
That conclusion, however, contradicts the evidence of 40 years of exit 
polls.  In 11 presidential elections since 1972, voters over 65 have voted more 
 
Republican than voters under 30 in every contest but one (1988, for some  
reason). In none of the 11 elections did young voters tilt more Republican 
than  the overall electorate; their levels of support for Democratic 
candidates in  each campaign topped those of the general electorate by an 
average of 
five  points.
 
These figures conclusively rebut the progressive hope that youthful 
liberals  generally maintain their fervent commitment to liberalism as they age 
and 
 mature. The voters who lean Republican in middle age and beyond are the 
same  people, after all, who leaned Democratic in their younger years. For all 
their  diabolical cleverness, Karl Rove and other cunning conservatives 
haven’t yet  developed a scheme for creating new voters in a lab who emerge 
pre-aged to a  seasoned 65 with an unstoppable instinct to vote for members of 
the Bush  family.
 
My own experience could serve to illustrate the point.
 
I cast my first presidential ballot in 1972 for the Democratic nominee, 
_George  McGovern_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/10/21/george-mcgovern-democratic-icon-and-former-presidential-candidate-dies-at-age-90.html)
 
. (I also worked professionally in the McGovern campaign, but that’s  
another story entirely.) At the time, I joined my fellow baby boomers, then  
18-29, in giving McGovern 46 percent of our support—vastly better than the 
truly 
 pathetic 38 percent he received from the overall electorate on his way to  
crushing defeat in a 49-state landslide.
 
Twelve years later, my cohort had moved on, and so had I. The youngest of 
the  old group had now reached age 30 and the oldest of us were well into 
their 40s.  Like 58 percent of all voters between ages 30 and 49 in 1984, I 
proudly cast my  vote for Ronald Reagan (I had also supported him in 1980.) 
This time, the  boomers who had given McGovern an eight-point advantage 
compared to his showing  in the broader electorate gave Democrat Walter Mondale 
only one point more, 42  percent, than his percentage of the nationwide popular 
vote. In other words, as  we moved toward middle age, the progressive tilt 
that had characterized our  youth had all but disappeared.

 
Of course it’s too early to determine with any certainty whether the same  
maturing process will work its magic on youthful Obama cadres from 2008 and  
2012, but there is some indication that the shift has already begun. As the 
 hope-and-change candidate of four years ago, Obama swept voters between 18 
and  29 by a truly stunning margin of 34 points, 66 to 32 percent. Four 
years later,  a significant portion of those true believers had moved into the 
30- to  45-year-old segment of the population, a group that chose Obama with 
a much more  modest majority of 52 percent. It was exactly the same 
percentage, by the way,  that he received from the same age group four years 
before. 
 
Chait suggests that the progressive inclinations of this year’s under-30s  
will remain steady and unshakable as the years pass, citing polling data 
showing  33 percent of young voters calling themselves liberal in 2012, 
compared to 25  percent of the larger electorate. But that’s a reflection of 
their 
circumstances  as much as their ideological commitment. People under 30 are 
disproportionately  single, religiously uncommitted, and earning incomes 
below the national median.  Such voters combined to deliver Obama’s margin of 
victory.
 
Among the unmarried, who make up 41 percent of the electorate, Obama won by 
a  margin of 24 percent. Among the 17 percent who say they “never” attend 
religious  services, he won by 28 percent. And with those earning less than 
$50,000 a year,  who comprise 41 percent of the voting public, he enjoyed a 
22-percent  edge.
 
The most salient point about all these characteristics is that, like youth  
itself, they count as temporary: the statistics show that few of those who 
are  single, irreligious, and economically challenged before age 30 will 
stay that  way as they progress through middle age and beyond. And it’s no 
accident that  Romney won big majorities of those groups—the married, the 
religiously engaged,  and the economically prosperous—associated so clearly 
with 
the middle aged and  the middle class.
 
Chait expresses admiration for the 59 percent of young voters who agreed 
with  the statement that “government should do more to solve problems” and 
assumes  that this opinion stems from thoughtful analysis of the issues of the 
day. But  it’s at least as plausible that the youthful preference for 
activist government  stems from the relatively small number of those between 18 
and 29 who’ve ever  been asked to pay for such initiatives. IRS figures 
indicate that they are  vastly under-represented among the bare majority of 
Americans who pay personal  income taxes, and even more under-represented among 
those who pay at the highest  rates. It’s also safe to assume that under-30s 
include a substantial number who  benefit directly from subsidized _student  
loans_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/galleries/2012/09/09/why-college-isn-t-worth-it-students-and-their-loans-photos.html#introSlide)
 , either 
as current students or as recent graduates struggling with  debt.
 
None of this means their liberal leanings are inappropriate or unworthy, 
but  they are often fleeting, polling data suggest. And for those who suggest 
that  the modern university provides such a thorough brainwashing that 
college  graduates will never escape its influence, it might be worth 
considering 
that  Romney, not Obama, won a majority of the 29 percent of voters with 
undergraduate  degrees. The great majority of those students attended 
university since the  1970s, well after the loony left had captured control of 
the 
Ivory Tower. After  all, it was 1986 when Jesse Jackson led 500 Stanford 
students in the memorable  chant “Hey hey, Ho Ho, Western Civ has got to go!”
 
Not even the most incurably optimistic conservative could expect that all  
youthful leftists would make the liberating journey from darkness to light, 
from  callow adolescence to responsible maturity, and join the enlightened 
armies of  the right. But even a relatively small portion—say, 10 percent—
managing to  follow that well-worn path would push most elections in a 
Republican direction  in a future nation where the percentage of the young 
remains 
steady or slightly  shrinks, and the numbers of the old vastly and 
consequentially  expand.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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