Sunday, November 08, 2009 Last Update:11:25 am ET

Society|Thu, Aug. 14 2008 02:56 PM EDT

Young Religious Voters Notable Player in Swing States

By Jennifer Riley|Christian Post Reporter

Young religious voters could be the determining factor in several swing states in this November election, a prominent political science with expertise in religion and politics said.

  • supporters
    (Photo: AP Images / Chris Carlson, File)
    In this May 23, 2008 file photo, supporters cheer for then Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., at a rally in Sunrise, Fla.

In the swing states of Ohio, Missouri and Colorado, religious young voters have the potential to give the win to either Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama or Republican rival John McCain, said John C. Green, director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at The University of Akron in Ohio, according to Fox News.

“These ‘battleground states’ are good reflections of the nation as a whole,” Green, who is also senior fellow with the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, explained. “The youth vote - both religious and non-religious - are likely to show the same patterns at the national level. If they [religious youth] can have an impact nationally, they will have an impact in the battleground states.”

In the last two elections, George W. Bush won narrow victories in the battleground states of Colorado, Missouri and Ohio. Given these slim margin of vote differences, Green noted, the religious youth votes have the potential to tip the scales in these important states.

There are more than 4 million practicing Christian, Jew, and Muslim youth that are qualified to vote on Nov. 4. Young evangelicals made up about 20 percent of the overall youth vote in the last election.

But it is difficult to predict who the young religious voters will cast their ballots for. Many young voters express this year that they want to move beyond hot-button issues such as abortion and gay “marriage,” although for many these are still high priorities, and expand the agenda to social justice issues, like poverty and torture.

As a result, young faith-based voters cannot be predicted to vote for the Republican Party as in the past, and many are opting to be independent voters.

"In three decades I've never seen this sort of student-youth involvement," said Jim Wallis, author of the best-seller The Great Awakening, according to The Associated Press. "I do think there's a major shift under way."

"They're leaving the Republican Party in droves, but they're not automatically Democrats," Wallis said. "They're not going to jump in the pocket of the Democratic Party the way they did with the Republican Party."

In order to court these young voters, supporters of the campaigns are using popular youth-oriented social networks, such as Facebook, to present their candidate to this critical voting bloc.

Obama has a Facebook forum called “Christians for Obama,” while McCain has his group of “Christians for McCain.”

In 2000, about 40 percent of registered voters age 18 to 29 voted. In 2004, the youth vote turnout increased to 49 percent, or 20.9 million young voters, according to Fox. Overall, the youth vote made up 16 percent of the overall count in 2004.

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  • mw »
    Fri Aug 15, 2008 2:38 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Burf- Another thing: Read the statement you made about your "pro-choice but not pro-abortion friends"... Surely you'll see the fallacy.

    And - You say you respect the opinion that "a woman and a woman alone" makes the decision to abort her baby. Either abortion kills a baby or it does not. No two ways about it. That a woman makes this decision for herself doesn't make it somehow noble... Talk about rights.... It's a human rights issue. People who are bigger and stronger decide to kill the weaker and the voiceless. That's not noble. And - where are these pro-choice friends on working for adoption rights? Great cover story on that (The Missing Adoptions) in National Review's July issue.

  • mw »
    Fri Aug 15, 2008 2:17 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    burf- A christian may choose not to vote at all but it's never fine to cast a vote for someone who supports policy abhorrent to God. Murder of the not-yet-born and supporting laws penalizing those taking a scriptural view of homosexual sex (see what happened to Catholic adoption agencies over "gay" issues) would be abhorrent.

    You feel a desire to help the hurting -- well, help. Scores of NON -govt groups are out there. We are to help and love our neighbor, yes. In wise, efficient ways that really help. The gov track record on that??? And Obama? Helping the poor, weak and needy? As a State Senator he voted NO on giving medical attention to babies with enough audacity of hope to survive their own abortions.

  • burf »
    Thu Aug 14, 2008 4:46 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I'll tell you, it's going to be a long time, before I vote Republican again. I feel as though the GOP has been using us. They say all the right things during an election, but once in office, it's another story.
    Even on abortion, I don't believe they care one way or the other, and probably prefer the laws stay as they are, so they can use the issue again, another time.
    As stated in the story, I don't agree with Obama on abortion, or gay marriage, but on most Domestic & Foreign Policy issues, I'm tending to like what he's saying.
    People in this country are hurting, and as a Christian, I feel a desire to help as much as possible.
    It's obvious, at least to me now, that the Democrats seem more in-line with Christ's thinking. Also, I don't like that McCain had an affair with his current wife, while still married to a crippled woman (she was injured in a car accident).
    One last thing on abortion, I know a bunch of pro-choice people from school, and NONE of them are pro-abortion.
    While I don't agree with them, I respect their opinion that a woman, and a woman alone should be able to make the choice.
    I just think we're so used to voting GOP, that most of us have forgotten how to think, and just do it out of habit.
    I wish people would stop following, and start thinking for themselves.

  • JHS »
    Thu Aug 14, 2008 4:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    After going to the Bob Barr for president website, I have to say McCain looks better all the time. That has be one of the scariest websites I have seen in a while.
    I kept waiting for pictures of people goose stepping or something....

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