Contact: Sujatha Jahagirdar (213) 251-3690 x321, (323) 309-6120 cell
Youth voter turnout surged by 25 percent in New Hampshire, with 53,000 more young people
turning to the polls last night than in 2004.
The increase in youth turnout represented more than seven times
the margin of victory by Democratic winner Clinton. Once again youth were
critical in deciding the winners - with McCain winning the youth vote on the
Republican ticket and Clinton
winning the 25-29 year old age bracket, edging out Obama who won the 18-24 year
old vote.
Young
volunteers have been engaging all of the
Presidential candidates for months, as part of the
Student PIRGs’ What’s Your Plan? campaign, showing
up to every candidate event that they
can get into - barbeques, photo-ops, fundraisers and town hall meetings to ask
all of the presidential candidates
what their plans are on key youth
issues and to get them to pay
attention to young people. Students have been organizing events in states
across the country, including New Hampshire, South Carolina, Nevada, California, Colorado,
and Iowa. They’ve also been turning out their peers to
the polls and plan to continue their efforts through the primaries and general
election. Photo
gallery
To date,
student volunteers with the Student PIRGs’ What’s
Your Plan? campaign have spoken to the candidates, face to face, more than
100 times to ask them what their plans are on key youth issues like global
warming, college affordability, health care and financial security.
# # #
The Student PIRGs are independent state-based
student organizations that work to solve public interest problems related to
the environment, consumer protection, and government reform.
The Student
PIRGs’ New Voters Project is the nation’s largest youth voter
mobilization program. Since 2004, we have registered more than 600,000
young people and made more than 650,000 peer to peer voter turnout contacts to
get young people to the polls on Election Day. Due in large part to our efforts, the
youth vote increased by 4.3 million votes, or 9% in 2004 and an analysis of our
work in 2006 found that in the student dense precincts in which we worked, the
youth vote increased on average by 157%.