caucus

Junior Super Tuesday Preview

Tomorrow is Junior Super Tuesday - Sen. Clinton's final firewall, if you believe it. In Texas, both campaigns are courting the growing latino youth vote, and in Ohio, Sen. Obama has indie rock stars pumping up his already uber-energized youth supporters. He may need that extra support if prediction of snow storms blanketing the state tomorrow turn out to be true.

Here's a quick look at the demographic breakdowns of the youth vote in Ohio, Texas, Vermont and Rhode Island. As per usual, expect youth turnout to be somewhere between the 2004 primary share of the electorate and the current share of eligible voters. If trends hold, somewhere about 4 - 5% higher than 2004 primary results is a good guess, though Ohio has been a highly targeted and competitive state in recent years and turnout might be slightly higher there.

Everyone is looking at Texas and Ohio as the make-or-break states for Clinton, and in both states she has a greater than usual advantage among young voters. Young latinos, who have been more likely to support her campaign that than of Sen. Obama, are 33% of the youth electorate in Texas, and young voters as a whole are almost one quarter of the electorate overall. Most polls are projecting a slight Obama win, but they are really all within the margin of error. Leveraging young latinos to chip away Obama's base might be Clinton's key to sneaking out a victory in the Lone Star state.

In Ohio, young voters are less likely than usual to be in college or hold a college degree. Non-college youth have been turning out in far fewer numbers than their college educated peers, but when they do turn out it has tended to be for Clinton, giving her a chance to rack up a higher than expected delegate count in the state.

So Clinton stands to do better in those two states among young voters than she normally does, but the question is does it matter? Most analysts are reporting that the delegate math doesn't favor her, and it's not clear at all that there's any successful path to the nomination at this point barring a massive revolt against Obama among the super delegates.

Warning - all the state named links are to pdf files.

Ohio

2004 Share of Primary Electorate: 9%
2008 Share of the Population: 21%
Total Youth Population: 1,750,179
White non-Hispanic: 83%
Black non-Hispanic: 12%
College Students: 18%

Texas

2004 Share of Primary Electorate: 10%
2008 Share of the Population: 24%
Total Youth Population: 3,557,968
White non-Hispanic: 49%
Black non-Hispanic: 14%
Hispanic/Latino: 33%
College Students: 19%

Vermont

2004 Share of Primary Electorate: 10%
2008 Share of the Population: 20%
Total Youth Population: 94,496
White non-Hispanic: 94%
College Students: 28%

Rhode Island

2004 Share of Primary Electorate: 8%
2008 Share of the Population: 22%
Total Youth Population: 166,116
White non-Hispanic: 82%
Other: 19%
College Students: 24%

Open Thread - For All Things Primary/Caucus

Jibber jabber away if you're in one of today's primary/caucus states. Let us know what's happening.

I'll be dropping in occasionally and posting some stuff later tonight.

It Ain't Over 'Till It's Over: Preview for February 9th and 10th

CIRCLE has released some fact sheets on a few of the remaining primary/caucuses. You can find them, as well as fact sheets on all previous contests, here.

Tomorrow, voters in Louisiana, Nebraska, and Washington (pdfs) state will head to their respective polls/caucuses to cast their ballot. Here's what the youth vote looks like in each of those states.

Louisiana - Closed Primary
Youth population: 758,012
Youth Share of the population: 24%
White non-Hispanic Youth: 61%
Black non-Hispanic Youth: 34%
College Students: 24%

The rest of the primary/caucus schedule for the next month

Nebraska - Closed Caucus
Youth Population: 311,980
Youth Share of Population: 24%
White non-Hispanic: 83%
Other Race/Ethnicity: 17%
College Students: 24%

Washington - Open Caucus
Youth Population: 937,260
Youth Share of Population: 21%
White non-Hispanic: 77%
Other Race/Ethnicity: 23%
College Student: 16%

On Sunday, Maine (pdf) will vote:

Maine - Closed Caucus
Youth population: 199,528
Youth Share of the Population: 19%
White non-Hispanic: 95%
Other Race/Ethnicity: 5%
College Student: 22%

Over at Open Left, Chris Bowers makes predictions and theorizes about what it will mean in the race for delegates.

Youth Turnout Up - What We Know So Far

Updated at 3:40pm to reflect additional state returns.

Updated at 12:30 to reflect changes to the exit polling.

CIRCLE still has not posted results from Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Deleware, and New Mexico. And there seems to be no data at all available for all four of the Super Tuesday states that employed election day registration (Alaska, Idaho, Minnesota and North Dakota). But here's what we know so far about yesterday's youth turnout.

It was up, and in some states up big.

Youth turnout quadrupled in Tennessee. It tripled in Georgia, Missouri and Oklahoma, and it doubled in Massachusetts. There were, however, some states that didn't fare so well. In New York, youth turnout flatlined while turnout for the 30+ demographics dropped by 10 points, creating a net decline in voter turnout in the state.

As a share of the Democratic electorate, young voters increased their share in every state for which comparable data is available.

In most states, that increased turnout was to the advantage of Barack Obama, who won the youth vote in 13 12 of the 15 states for which data is currently available. The margin by which Obama carried young voters in those states varied wildly. In some states, like Georgia, he maintained his towering advantage over Clinton among young voters, and in Missouri, where he won by a mere 10,000 votes, young voters may well have been the difference in his campaign. In other states, though, like California, Clinton cut that advantage down to just a few points. Clinton actually won California. Guess the CNN exit polls are still adjusting.

Regardless of which candidate carries the nomination next month, that increased turnout will be a big advantage for Democrats in the general election. In Connecticut, Georgia, Massachusetts, Missouri, New York and Tennessee combined, 458,000 more young people voted in the Democratic contest than the Republican. The actual amount varied widely from state to state with Connecticut at the low end (~19,000 more Democratic youth participants) and New York at the high end (~203,000 more).

The one exception to this rule thus far was Oklahoma, in which 10,000 more young voters participated in the Republican primary than the Democratic primary.

All the data available thus far on youth turnout is pulled together in the chart below.

A quick word on methodology and data sets. In the chart below, the share of the electorate data and the turnout data come from two different sources (CNN and CIRCLE, respectively).

The Share of the Electorate data represents the youth vote share of the Democratic electorate - not the statewide electorate as a whole. The data on turnout represents total youth turnout across the state - both Democratic and Republican voters combined.

If you write about this or cite it, don't mix the apples and the oranges.

State '04 SoE

'08 SoE SoE Change % C % O Turnout Turnout Rate EDR
Alabama N/A 13% N/A 32% 64% 135,597 19% N
Alaska N/A Y
Arizona 7% 8% +1% 37% 59% 55,867 7% N
Arkansas N/A 9% N/A 61% 37% 46,421 10% N
California 11% 16% +5% 51% 47% 852,459 17% N
Colorado N/A N
Connecticut 5% 10% +5% 39% 58% 51,436 12% N
Deleware 9% 10% +1% 28% 66% N
Georgia 11% 18% +7% 20% 77% 281,724 21% N
Idaho N/A Y
Illinois N/A 15% N/A 29% 69% 377,996 18% N
Kansas N/A N
Massachusetts 9% 14% +5% 49% 48% 231,022 25% N
Minnesota N/A Y
Missouri 9% 14% +5% 30% 65% 190,863 21% N
New Jersey N/A 13% N/A 39% 59% 187,889 18% N
New Mexico N/A 8% N/A 42% 55% N
New York 8% 15% +7% 43% 56% 311,833 12% N
North Dakota N/A Y
Oklahoma 6% 9% +3% N/A> N/A 82,609 14% N
Tennessee 7% 13% +6% 44% 53% 139,831 15% N
Utah N/A 17% N/A 25% 70% 66,248 15% N

North Dakota Youth Denied Caucus Rights

This is a shame.

Democratic officials have said previously that caucus voters could be 17, if the person's 18th birthday came before the November general election.

But Selzler says officials have looked again at party delegate selection rules, and they require caucus participants to be at least 18.

I don't have any more specifics, so don't know if it's possible to change this before the ND caucus. Seems like a terrible precedent by the state party to turn away eager young voters at a time when they are participating in record numbers.

Nebraska Caucus 02.09.08: it doesn’t just happen in Iowa

Jane Fleming Kleeb is the Executive Director of the Young Voter PAC which helps Democratic candidates and State Parties win with the 18-35 year-old vote through endorsements, on-the-ground support, training, strategy and money. She is a regular on Fox and is part of MTV’s Street Team ‘08 representing Nebraska.

Nebraska’s Democratic Caucus is on February 9th, 2008.  Residents all over Nebraska will go to community places, like churches and fairgrounds, to talk with their neighbors about who they are voting for in the Presidential race.  Hear from fellow young people in Nebraska about what the caucus is, how it works and who some people are thinking of caucusing for on February 9th.  Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada all had record turnout among 18-30 year olds, Nebraska is getting ready to continue the trend.

Youth Vote Turnout Rises in Nevada, but Not Enough for an Obama Win

Cross posted from The Washington Independent

In the battle to court young voters in Nevada, Sen. Barack Obama (D–IL) emerged victorious at Saturday’s caucus for the Democratic presidential nomination. But it was not enough for him to overcome Sen. Hillary Clinton’s (D–NY) advantage among older voters and women, who carried the New York senator to a 51 percent to 45 percent victory over her rival.

According to polling data from the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE), more than 15,000 young voters participated in the Democratic caucus on Jan. 19, a dramatic increase over turnout in 2004, when only 9,000 Nevadans – young and old – took part. Obama won 59 percent to 33 percent among voters aged 18–29, recapturing a solid base of support that seemed shaky after he lost to Clinton among 25–29 year-olds in the New Hampshire primary.

Despite those gains in Nevada turnout, young voters wielded significantly less influence there than in previous contests this year. That proved a detriment to the Obama campaign.

While young voters make up 22 percent of eligible voters in Nevada, CIRCLE estimated they were only 13 percent of caucus-goers on Saturday. This was a sharp decrease from Iowa and New Hampshire, where young voters were 22 percent and 18 percent of the electorate, respectively. In comparison, voters older than 60 made up 36 percent of the electorate on Saturday.

Youth organizers, who spent weeks -- and in the case of the Nevada Young Democrats, months -- in the state educating young voters about the caucus process, were quick to point out a number of mitigating factors that may account for the smaller turnout. Most significantly, they note that attention from the presidential campaigns, which ramped up in the week leading up to the caucus, came too little, too late. Campaigns were on the ground in Iowa and New Hampshire for months, and the candidates themselves visited the states more than 100 times. This was not the case in Nevada, where the leading candidates were all but absent until recently.

The start time of the caucus, which required that participants be in line by noon, may also have played a role in the lower youth turnout. Many young people in Nevada work night shifts. "I talked to a number of young voters who expressed their frustration," said David Hardt, president of the Young Democrats of America, who was in Nevada to observe the caucus. He continued, "The caucus didn't allow anyone who works nights the opportunity to be part of the process."

Youth advocates also noted that organizing students in Nevada can be difficult. Many local colleges and universities are commuter schools, dispersing the youth population and complicating canvassing efforts. Another problem they cited was that the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, one of the largest schools in the state, will not be back in session until Jan 22.

Despite these challenges, the youth organizers interviewed all insisted that young Nevadans made a generational statement in favor of change in their support for Obama. Many asserted that, despite smaller turnout, young voters are still playing a big role.

“It is clear young people are keeping Obama competitive'" said Jane Fleming Kleeb, the executive director of the Young Voter PAC, "they are much more excited by Democrats overall.”

That may be true. Young voters, along with African-Americans, Independents and secular voters, were one of the few demographics to overwhelmingly support Obama over Clinton. They helped the Illinois senator emerge from the Silver State with something of a win -- or at least a tie. Though Clinton captured the popular vote, because of the way the caucuses are weighted, Obama will take 13 delegates to the Democratic Convention, compared to Clinton’s 12. Candidates need 2,208 delegates to secure the nomination.

Kleeb is also right that young voters are supporting the Democratic candidates in greater numbers than the Republicans. The number of young people participating in the Democratic caucus was more than triple that of the GOP caucus. This continued a trend seen in previous states, and is consistent with youth voting trends in national elections since 2004.

According to research by CIRCLE, in the 2004 general election, younger voters chose Sen. John Kerry (D–MA), the Democratic nominee, over President George W. Bush 54–45 percent. In the 2006 midterm, young voters chose Democratic candidates over GOP candidates by the even greater margin, 60–38 percent. More recently, youth participation in the Iowa Democratic caucus was four times as large as that in the Republican caucus; and in New Hampshire Democratic youth turnout was almost double Republican turnout.

Young Nevadans who did participate in the Republican caucus overwhelmingly chose former Gov. Mitt Romney, who captured 50 percent of the GOP youth vote. Romney went on to win the Republican caucus. Rep. Ron Paul (R–TX) came in second, with 15 percent of the youth vote, and 14 percent of the total vote.

Youth support among the Republican candidates remains more divided than on the Democratic side. Young conservative voters in different states have thrown their support behind three different candidates. In Iowa, Mike Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas. captured the youth vote – potentially on a wave of young evangelical support. In New Hampshire, Sen. John McCain (R–AZ) won the youth vote with support from young Independents. Romney has now twice captured young conservative voters -- first in Michigan and now in Nevada.

Overall, young voters continue to play a smaller role in the GOP nominating process than on the Democratic side. Young Republicans made up a smaller share of the Republican electorate than their Democratic peers in all the previous states.

Super Duper Preliminary Youth Numbers (Updated)

Update: So scratch that and call it a tie? Looks like that while Senator Clinton technically won the state, the way delegates are distributed means that Obama will leave Nevada with 13 delegates to the convention to Clinton's 12. Ari Melber at The Nation has the story.
--------------------------------
So Senator Clinton wins Nevada, and it looks like it's on a wave of turnout from older women. According to CNN's exit polling, women were almost a supermajority, outnumbering men at the caucus by 59 - 41%. And this was most definitely an older caucus. 68% of caucus-goers were over 45 years old.

Obama seems to have recouped his losses among young voters after Hillary edged him out in New Hampshire among 25 - 29 year olds. Obama won young voter 59 - 33%. Unfortunately, it didn't matter. This was the worst turnout so far for youth. Voters under 30 made up only 13% of caucus goers even though they are 22% of the eligible voting population.

Clinton cleaned up amongst almost every single demographic except youth, African Americans and independents. I wonder what % of young women and Latinos went to Clinton . . .

Moderating factors: this was Nevada's first caucus, making a strange and intimidating process even more so, and the candidates didn't lavish nearly as much attention on this state as they did Iowa and New Hampshire. Both of these might have played a role in driving down youth turnout. Since this is the first time Nevada is holding a caucus like this, we won't, unfortunately be able to tell if youth turnout went up or down from previous cycles.

I'll have more as CIRCLE crunches the numbers and youth orgs start reporting out from the caucus. This was a disappointment though to be sure.

Nevada Caucus Open Thread

Same deal as always. If you're on the ground in Nevada or on your couch watching the results come in, use this thread to share stories, incoming data, etc.

Update: Through my fellowship, I've now got a gig covering the youth vote for the Washington Independent. Here's my story about today's Nevada Caucus.

CIRCLE Releases Final Numbers on Iowa Youth Vote

CIRCLE has released its final data set on the Iowa youth turnout (pdf). Here's a quick snapshot of their findings.

  • 13% of all Iowans under the age of 30 participated in the caucus. This was up from 4% in 2004, and 3% in 2000.
  • Turnout among those under 30 tripled.
  • The younger you went, the higher turnout was. 15% of 17-24 year olds turned out, vs. 9% of those between 25 and 29 years of age.
  • 73% of young caucus-goers participated in the Democratic caucus vs. 27% in the republican caucus (46,640 vs. 10,235 out of 64,080 caucus-goers under 30).

CIRCLE Iowa Turnout

The Democratic Caucus

  • Young voters made up 22% of Democratic caucus-goers, up from 17% in 2004.
  • The majority of young Democratic caucus-goers were female, the reverse was true for the Republican caucus.
  • More than 4x as many young independents participated in the Democratic Caucus than the Republican caucus (~9,500 vs 2,000).
  • In the Democratic Caucus, Obama drew the support of 57% of both the 17-24 and 25-29 groups.
  • Among young caucus-goers in the Democratic caucus, the under 25 group was the most liberal of all demographics. 77% of Democratic caucus-goers under 25 identified as "liberal," compared to 54% of the entire Democratic caucus electorate.

Republican Caucus

  • Young voters made up 11% of Republican caucus-goers.
  • Among the Republican caucus-goers under 30, 40% of voters under 30 chose Mike Huckabee.
  • 65% of caucus-goers under 25 described themselves as "born again" or "evangelical."
  • Republican caucus-goers under 25 were the least likely to describe themselves as "very conservative" (30% vs 45% for all caucus goers).

Iowa Youth Share

I'll have specific numbers on 2004 turnout and current population for New Hampshire later today. That will be the baseline against which tonight's youth turnout should be measured. But people will inevitably reach for an Iowa comparison as well, and this data from CIRCLE is the best out there.

It's true that Barack Obama brought a lot of new, independent young people into the party (almost 25% of all young democratic caucus-goers), but of particular interest, I thought, were the number of young Democratic caucus-goers who identified as "liberal." That's the face of post-partisanship?

Syndicate content