Thursday, May 9, 2013

What the Census Tells Us About the Youth Vote |

What the Census Tells Us About the Youth Vote |:


What the Census Tells Us About the Youth Vote

Yesterday the Census Bureau released a demographic report on the 2012 election that’s chock full of really interesting stuff.
The Bureau’s analysis of racial data has gotten the most attention, and not unreasonably. The report’s dramatic finding that black voter turnout levels rose above white levels for the first time in American history is just the beginning of that story. (I myself was even more intrigued to learn that black turnout rose almost as much between 2008 and 2012 as it did between 2004 and 2008. There’s a huge amount to unpack in just that one statistic.)
Beyond the racial demographics, however, there’s a lot more of interest lurking in the numbers — much of it unmentioned in the formal report and only discoverable in the accompanying tables. Here are some of the nuggets I found most compelling:
Perhaps the most dramatic age-related data had to do with educational attainment. Among all young citizens (defined as those under 25 years old), some 41% said they’d voted. (It’s important to note that this is an undercount, because not everyone was asked this question or answered it. Unlike with the racial date noted above, the Census did not use statistical analysis to correct for non-responses.) Among those without a high


The Incredibly Rapid Decline and Fall of America’s Youth

One magazine. Three covers. Five years apart.
Time-Magazine-Cover-Feb-2008-72417120110228_400g9510.20_Millennials.Cover
Boy, the young generation sure went to hell in a hurry.