Here’s a number that’s scary for Republicans: 18 percent. Since 2006, that’s been the Democrats’ average lead among young voters nationwide, according to Gallup. It makes sense that the party that has stood in the way of marriage equality, immigration reform, raising the minimum wage, equal pay for equal work and increasing college aid for students would have a problem connecting with young Americans. And in election years, this gap matters even more. For example, President Barack Obama’s 67 percent share of young voters in 2012 was widely cited as one of the major contributors to his victory.
Well, it’s another election year, and despite a self-commissioned “Autopsy Report” calling on Republicans to shift gears with young people, the GOP hasn’t changed. Republicans shut down the government in an attempt to boot approximately 3 million young Americans off their families’ health insurance plans. They pushed for discriminatory anti-LGBT legislation in states across the country and continue to block immigration reform that would help young immigrants gain access to higher education and a path to U.S. citizenship. House Republicans even voted for a bill that could dismantle the Obama administration’s action to provide relief from deportation for undocumented youth.
In short, the GOP is still pushing the same old agenda that has alienated young voters for years. And rather than taking concrete steps to appeal to young Americans, their 2014 strategy is becoming clearer: Since they can’t win on their ideas, they’ve decided to rig the system.
In North Carolina, a restrictive GOP voter law prevents college students from using their school ID as voter identification. In Florida, Republican Gov. Rick Scott’s administration blocked the use of the University of Florida student union as an early voting site. In Pennsylvania, Republican Gov. Tom Corbett is fighting a court decision invalidating the state’s restrictive voter ID law, which limited the types of student IDs that could be used to vote. After pushing a 2011 bill that would prevent many students from voting in their college towns, the Republican Speaker of the New Hampshire House rationalized his support by saying that young voters are “foolish,” “liberal” and “just vote with their feelings.” And those are just four examples.
Voting restrictions impact all Americans, but they disproportionately hurt young people, working people, seniors, African Americans, Latinos and women. Just this weekend, The New York Times highlighted these attempts to make voting more difficult — saying that Republicans in nine states have passed measures making it harder to vote in the last year alone.
For those of us in school or just out of it, crucial tools that allow young voters and all Americans to more easily participate in the electoral process are under attack by Republicans, from early voting hours and absentee voting to voting where you go to school. By ending or limiting these, Republicans aren’t targeting just anybody: They’re targeting us.
Unlike Republicans, who have doubled down on a cynical scheme to stymie voter turnout, Democrats’ key values — like inclusion and empowerment — continue to define everything we do. We believe that more voices means more prosperity and that there is no issue in this country that’s ever been solved with less democracy. That’s why we’re taking action to stop the GOP’s efforts to make it more difficult to vote and to promote our own efforts to expand the franchise to more Americans.
The Democratic Party’s push to expand the vote focuses on ensuring that every eligible citizen can register, that every registered voter can vote and that every vote is accurately counted. We’re doing this not only by challenging legislative obstacles to voting but also by proactively working to register more voters and strengthen the democratic process nationwide.
On this issue, like many others, Democrats are standing with young Americans, while Republicans are shutting them out. Our voices won’t be silenced. Instead, young people across the country are ready to fight these cynical political tactics and support Democratic efforts to expand the vote.
Taylor Myers is President of the College Democrats of Ohio. Colleen Cullen is Chair of the College Democrats of Wisconsin. John Quiroz is President of the Florida College Democrats. Louis Duke is President of the College Democrats of North Carolina.