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    Archive for the
    ‘millennial generation’ Category



    New Study on Millennial Latinos

    Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

    This was written by Alicia Menendez, a Senior Advisor at NDN and former Rock the Vote staff member, and was originally posted at the NDN Blog. It is reposted here in full with her permission. Any reposting should refer to and credit her original post: http://ndn.org/blog/2010/06/new-study-millennial-latinos and credit Democracia Ahora as the source of the polling data.

    Much is written about Latinos, America’s fastest growing minority, changing the fabric of America. But as much attention as is given to Latinos as a whole, surprisingly little has been written about Millennial Latinos, those of us born between 1982 and 2003 – part of the largest and most diverse generation in American history. This is especially shocking when you consider that we are the true engine of Latino population growth: thirty-four percent of Latinos are under age 18. We represent more than 20% of the Millennial Generation; never before has a minority ethnic group made up this large a share of young America.

    In an effort to fill that knowledge-gap, today Democracia Ahora, a Latino advocacy organization, released a National Study of Young Hispanics by pollsters Bendixen & Amandi. The study, comprised of 1,500 English and Spanish language interviews with young Latino voters (18-29) and citizens (16-17), offers an interesting glimpse into a world that most are just beginning to learn about. Among the study’s key findings:

    • 2/3 of young Latinos identify as “bicultural” and only 1/6 identify more with “American culture”
    • 83% believe discrimination is an important problem for them personally
    • Despite the overwhelming response on the question of discrimination, 91% believe in the American Dream
    • Like other Millennials, the majority gets their news online
    • But unlike other Millennials, a majority also watches Spanish language TV with some frequency
    • Like other Millennials, a plurality supports an activist approach to government
    • Yet a plurality doesn’t know what their political ideology is
    • Young Latinos are registered as Democrats 4:1, many citing the party’s inclusivity as a major rationale
    • Less than 10% express interest in the 2010 Elections

    Our youth gives us incredible long-term potential. Every year for the next 20 years, 500,000 Latinos will turn 18 and become eligible to vote. We have the capacity to determine the success of candidates and political parties in the short and long term.

    Here’s the catch: most advocates and campaigns know very little about Millennial Latinos. They don’t know who we are or where to reach us. Corporate America, by contrast, is keenly aware of the potential buying power of this demographic and far ahead in their efforts to court Millennial Latinos – marketing everything from bilingual cartoons characters to energy drinks inspired by Mexican luchadors – directly to us.

    In the next few days I am going to do a bit of a deeper dive on each of the main findings. Be sure to stay tuned.

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Save us, Millennials

    Friday, June 4th, 2010

    Check out this must read piece by New York Times writer Timothy Egan about Millennial voters. Egan turns the unfounded conventional wisdom that says young people don’t vote on it’s head and says, not only do young people vote, but even though we grew up in times of terrorism and war, we’re still optimistic. We’re the most optimistic group of all the groups.

    We’ve been led to believe that the grumpy, the cranky and the bitter will drive the midterm elections in the fall. You would never know, with nightly images of jowly Tea Partiers and their inchoate discontents, that people ages 18 to 29 years old made up a larger percentage of the 2008 electorate than those over 65.

    Because they gave their hearts to Obama, by an overwhelming margin, the young have a proprietary interest in this president. And now, at Obama’s moment of peril, when people who are losing their heads want him to lose his, we need the cooler minds of a generation that grew up with endless wars and color-coded terrorist alerts.

    If anyone should be complaining about deficits, it should be the 20-somethings who will have to pay for all those meds-popping boomers moving into the comfort of Medicare and Social Security.

    If anyone should be upset over two long wars that were put on the credit card, it should be the generation shedding the most blood in those conflicts.

    And if anyone should take personally the poisoning of a vast ecosystem in the Gulf of Mexico, it should the one cohort of the electorate that showed the most skepticism of oil companies and the strongest desire for a new green economy.

    We, the Millennial generation, aren’t afraid of anything. We welcome the future.

    Nor are the millennials afraid of immigration — in part because it’s a family issue. Nearly one in four Americans under the age of 18 have at least one immigrant parent, according to a recent national portrait put out by the Brookings Institution.

    “This is the most diverse generation in history,” said Heather Smith, the president of Rock the Vote, a nonpartisan youth political advocacy group. “They’re also optimistic, and don’t participate in the all the fear-mongering.”

    Rock the Vote has been saying this for years, we vote, we matter and when candidates pay attention to issues that effect us, we will vote for them. When the politicians live up to those promises made, we most likely vote for them again.

    Jason
    Bio:

    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Outdoor Nation Summit: Apply Today!

    Monday, May 17th, 2010

    Our friends at Outdoor Nation and Mobilize.org are looking for young leaders who will join together in support of a common mission: to champion the outdoors as athletes, artists, advocates and ambassadors. Outdoor Nation SummitDo you have what it takes to help start an outdoor movement and be part of the next American Revolution?

    On June 19th and 20th, young leaders from across the country will come together for the world’s first two-day Outdoor Youth Summit and Festival in Central Park in New York City. This ground-breaking event will harness the passion, energy and ideas of 500 Outdoor Nation Delegates ages 18-30 (younger applicants may apply if attending with a chaperone) who will work together to develop a national agenda, set priorities and outline strategies and solutions to champion the outdoors. This is your chance to deliver your message of change to the country as well as exchange ideas, skills and connections — building a strong Outdoor Nation for all Americans.

    Outdoor Nation will be providing accepted participants (1) night hotel accommodations and LIMITED TRAVEL SCHOLARSHIPS. The deadline to apply is this Thursday, May 20th!

    To apply, go to http://www.outdoornation.org/summit.

    **Applicants will be accepted to attend the Outdoor Nation Youth Summit on a rolling basis. All applicants will be notified of their acceptance by May 24. Questions? Email info@outdoornation.org.

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Are your ears burning?

    Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

    People are talking about you today, young voters. Seems like there is a lot of polling out there about whether or not you plan to vote in 2010. To wit…

    Check out this story about a recent poll from the Harvard Institute on Politics that found more enthusiasm to vote in 2010 among younger Republicans than younger Democrats. (Of course, there are more young people who self-identify as progressive or Democratic than conservative or Republican, but the only score that matters is who shows up at the polls.) From “Young Republicans are ready to rock the vote” (catchy headline!):

    More young John McCain supporters than Obama supporters are preparing to go to the polls in November, according to the survey. While 44 percent of Obama supporters said they’d “definitely” be voting, 53 percent of Sen. McCain’s (R-Ariz.) supporters said they planned to go to the polls. The poll found 35 percent of Democrats and 41 percent of Republicans intended to vote.

    Or you can take a look at the new Gallup poll, which found that 44 percent of 18 to 29 year olds are not enthusiastic about voting:

    One potential problem for Democrats is the lower enthusiasm about voting among young Americans. Twenty percent of registered voters aged 18 to 29 say they are very enthusiastic about voting this November. That compares with 31% to 39% of older age groups who are very enthusiastic.

    Or you can check out the column by Robert Samuelson (who is often wrong and totally out of touch, in my humble opinion) in the Washington Post, which asks if the Millennials will become the “chump” generation?

    Millennials could become the chump generation. They could suffer for their elders’ economic sins, particularly the failure to confront the predictable costs of baby boomers’ retirement. This poses a question. In 2008, Millennials voted 2 to 1 for Barack Obama; in surveys, they say they’re more disposed than older Americans to big and activist government. Their ardor for Obama is already cooling. Will higher taxes dim their enthusiasm for government?

    OK for now. Carry on.

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Getting it Wrong on Millennials

    Thursday, March 5th, 2009

    Gregory Rodriguez over at the L.A. Times wrote a column on Monday questioning the ability of the Millennial generation to cope with the country’s ongoing recession:

    “…The millennial generation — the computer-savvy, coddled and cocky children of the 1980s — may find that the current financial crisis is their crucible. If they survive it.

    Variously dubbed “Generation Me,” “Generation Y” or the “Everyone Gets an Award Generation,” today’s twentysomethings are to the boomers what the Japanese are to electronics. If the baby boomers invented me-first hyper-individualism, then the millennials have perfected it. Indeed, millennials are the children of the boomers, the product of family planing and the cult of self-esteem. They are hellbent on making it by their own rules.

    A lot of those who are studying millennials have identified this “we’ll do it our way” tendency as a sign of entitlement and weakness; by this logic, this won’t be the greatest generation, just the whiniest and the neediest. But in my experience — I’m Generation X with the Ys on my heels — and in the studies of another set of observers, all that confidence instills in them just what their folks hoped it would: resilience. OK, arrogance and resilience.”

    This is a pet peeve of mine, mostly because this is the latest in a long line of articles I’ve seen that just gets it plain wrong on what the Millennial generation is all about.

    To start with, many commentators point to our use of technology and social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter to label Millennials as self-obsessed, desperate to inform the world about what we’re eating for lunch while killing the English language with our darn netspeak. This focus on the trivial misses the much larger point – that these innovations allow us to be more connected to each other than ever before, and that these connections can go far beyond the internet and into real world action. After all, we just witnessed an election that revolutionized the way young people interact with politics (hello, YouTube debates), and politics itself was forced to change to meet the new demands of its audience (check out those Congressional Tweeters).

    I also take issue with the other labels Millennials always get slapped with: entitled and unrealistic. Mr. Rodriguez quotes Jean Twenge, the author of “Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled –and More Miserable Than Ever Before,” as saying that “If [millennials] don’t adjust to reality, many are going to end up with a lot of disappointment.” Mr. Rodriguez and Ms. Twenge are misinterpreting young people’s attitudes. While this generation has benefited from extraordinary opportunities, nothing has been handed to us. Rather than exhibiting naiveté or arrogance, Millennials display a simple belief that the way things are now doesn’t dictate the way things will stay forever.

    And in times of hardship, that attitude is critical. There’s one thing Mr. Rodriguez gets right in his column: the Millennial generation is resilient. We have to be. Franklin Roosevelt once said, “To some generations much is given. Of other generations much is expected. This generation has a rendezvous with destiny.” His words are as true today as they were back when our grandparents were young people themselves, entering adulthood with the weight of the Great Depression and the Second World War on their backs.

    We’re inheriting a planet on the edge of a climatic catastrophe, an economic meltdown that is threatening our families and ourselves, and ongoing wars that too many of our friends have fought and died in. The costs of an education are saddling us with the equivalent of a mortgage before we even leave school, the job market pretty much sucks for those of us entering the workforce, and more than 13 million of us (and counting) are going without health insurance.

    But, unlike Mr. Rodriguez, I don’t question the ability of our generation to meet these challenges. Much is expected of us, but the optimism that he seems to belittle as transitory or suspect is the very quality that will allow us to weather this time of crisis and upheaval. We do have faith: in the ability of governments and institutions to make people’s lives better, and in the hard work and personal responsibility that will make it happen.

    And we’ll be happy to take the lead.

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    Rock the Vote
    Bio: Rock the Vote was founded in 1990 to organize artists and fight against censorship of musicians. Since then we've evolved to focus on empowering young people to get involved in the political process. We use pop culture, peer-to-peer organizing, and the latest technology to raise visibility of politics and demystify the process of registering to vote.
    @rockthevote
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com