2006 Press Releases

March 22, 2006

GW’s Young Voter Strategies Announces Winners of Multi-Million Dollar Voter Registration Competition

Competition Winners Will Use Innovative Technologies and Grassroots Strategies to Register 350,000 Young Voters Nationwide in 2006

Washington, D.C.: Building on the historic young voter turnout in the 2004 elections, The George Washington University’s Graduate School of Political Management (GSPM) today announced the winners of the first-ever national competition to support innovative nonpartisan strategies to register young voters ages 18 to 29.

Competition winners will register 350,000 young voters nationwide in 2006 through the $3 million project, coordinated by Young Voter Strategies and funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts. This announcement comes during Young Voter Month, the 35th anniversary of 18 to 20 year olds winning the right to vote.

“The 2004 elections proved that if you ask them, they will vote,” said Heather Smith, Director of Young Voter Strategies at GW’s Graduate School of Political Management. “Massive outreach efforts resulted in young voter turnout increasing 11 points over 2000 levels—the highest increase since 18 year olds won the right to vote 35 years ago. Young Voter Strategies’ competition will build on that momentum in 2006 and refine youth outreach methods.”

Competition winners will each target different groups of young adults using strategic and innovative tactics.

· Mobile Voter and Music for America will register 18 to 29 year olds nationwide using creative text-messaging and Internet technology in conjunction with concerts and celebrity outreach.

· Redeem the Vote and the Center for Civic Participation will register religious youth in Alabama, Georgia, Florida and Michigan using both peer outreach and innovative email and Internet strategies.

· The Close Up Foundation will partner with high school teachers to register seniors in class.

· The American Association of State College and Universities, the state Public Interest Research Groups, and Allegheny College’s Center for Political Participation will register college students through peer-to-peer outreach at state colleges, private universities and community colleges.

· The National Council of La Raza will register young Latinos through its network of community-based organizations and service centers in 10 states.

· Black Youth Vote will register young African-Americans, focusing on those displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Registration will occur in six southern states and at historically black colleges and universities.

· The League of Young Voters will register young voters in four states, including two with election day registration, where the League will hold “parties at the polls” to register youth on Election Day.

· Women’s Voices, Women Vote will register single women through a direct marketing campaign.

· Building Blocks, Building Votes will register young renters by recruiting apartment and block captains to register their neighbors in Oregon’s densest, youngest neighborhoods.

After the elections, Young Voter Strategies and a team of university researchers will analyze each project to create a “Young Voter Toolkit” of best practices for mobilizing young voters. The toolkit will be a compilation of 2006 results and best practices learned from a decade of youth outreach. GW’s Graduate School of Political Management will unveil the toolkit in a series of briefings for political consultants, campaign managers and party officials, and make it available to key decision makers, opinion leaders, and nonprofits as they build their strategies for the 2008 election.

“Generation Y is large, increasingly active, and up for grabs politically,” said Dr. Christopher Arterton, Dean of the Graduate School of Political Management. “Parties should take note—in today’s evenly divided electorate, whoever wins over young voters today will win close elections in the short run and likely be the party in power in the long run.”

Young voter turnout in the 2004 election dramatically reversed a 30-year downward trend in youth electoral participation. In 2004, turnout among 18-24 year olds jumped eleven percentage points over 2000 levels, nearly three times the overall electorate’s four point increase. In the 2005 Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial elections, student-dense precincts saw increased turnout of 15 percent and 19.9 percent, respectively, even as overall voter turnout went down in both states. Experts contend that the increased engagement of Generation Y and the youth-oriented outreach in 2004 are the significant reasons behind the increases in young people voting.

Generation Y is huge in number, not yet wed to one party or another, and increasingly politically active. Currently 71 million strong, Generation Y is on track to make up 25 percent of the population by 2016. Research from Harvard University found that young adults 18 to 29 years old identify themselves as approximately one-third Democrat, one-third Independent, and one-third Republican.