Contact:
Sujatha Jahagirdar (323) 309 6120 (cell)
Since 2004, Ohio PIRG’s New Voters Project has
been among the state’s leading non-partisan youth voter mobilization program.
Founded with the goal of increasing youth political participation, we believe
that these increasing young voter rates bode well for democracy for three key
reasons. First, young people are the generation that will
be most impacted by our most pressing issues – such as global warming and
health care – and by engaging them now, it’s more likely that they’ll be a
driving force towards the solutions to these issues. Second, youth are a big and growing
portion of the national electorate (25% by 2008) and as such have the
potential to make big impacts on these issues. Finally, youth voting habits are
formed early - getting more young people to vote now results in a more active
citizenry in the future.
Mobilizing Young
Voters
Ohio PIRG’s New Voters Project has used tested
methods at an unprecedented scale and rigor to register more than 8,000 18-30
year olds to vote and made thousands more Get out the Vote (GOTV) contacts via
phone or face to face to encourage young people to vote.
Since 2004 our efforts have spanned
the state, working students at Capital
University,
Case Western Reserve
University, Kent State
University, Ohio State University, The
University of Cincinnati, Miami University,
Oberlin
University and the
University of
Toledo. The
non-partisan project has been endorsed state legislators, local businesses and
campus administrators.
The project works. In part due to
our efforts, youth voting rates in the state have increased significantly. According
to CIRCLE, in 2004
Ohio’s youth vote increased
by 14 percent over 2000. An
analysis of turnout figures in 14 student-dominated Ohio precincts targeted by
Ohio PIRG in 2006 found that the overall number of votes cast in those precincts
increased by about 50 percent over 2002.
Protecting
Student Voting Rights
Leading up to Tuesday’s primary and
on Election Day, on-the-ground organizers with Ohio PIRG will work in
student-dominated precincts to make sure that student voters are fully informed
about their voting rights and are afforded full access to the polls guaranteed
by the law.
Building a
Culture of Civic Engagement
Since 2004, young voters in the
United State have been turning out
in increasing numbers. The first contests of the 2008 presidential elections
have seen dramatic surges in the youth vote, with young voter turnout tripling
in Iowa, doubling in
New Hampshire and
increasing significantly in key Super Tuesday States.
As such, the 2008 elections present
an opportunity not only to keep driving up the youth voter turnout, but also to
establish and significantly boost our student organizing network. So Ohio PIRG
is working hard to make 2008 a pivotal year in youth voting by executing a
strategy that will not only boost youth voting in Ohio, but that will also
result in new permanent, self- funded civic engagement infrastructures that will
allow us to run bigger voter mobilization drives, recruit and train the next
generation of leaders, and create even more social change in the years to
come
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Ohio PIRG is a
student organization that works to solve
public interest problems related to the environment, consumer protection, and
government reform. http://www.ohiopirgstudents.org/.
Since 2004, we have registered more than 8,000 young Ohioans to
vote. An analysis
of turnout figures in 14 student-dominated Ohio precincts
targeted by Ohio PIRG in 2006 found that the overall number of votes cast in
those precincts increased by about 50 percent over 2002.