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Daily Nebraskan

Generation Y showing increased political apathy

Megan Svoboda

Issue date: 11/27/07 Section: Features
Aiken
Aiken
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Generation Y, also known as Echo Boomers, consists of 18- to 24-year-olds who are voting less and lack a major interest in politics and voting.

In 2006, USA Today reported that among a survey of 650 18- to 30-year-olds, 69 percent said they were most likely going to vote in November, and 80 percent said they were registered to vote.

Yet another survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press said that among a survey of 1,804 adults, 40 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds are not registered to vote.

"Voter turnout rates have dropped a lot," said Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, professor of political science at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. "There are a lot of people who don't see voting as a duty."

Theiss-Morse said members of both Generations X and Y believe their votes don't make a difference, and if their parents don't vote, they likely view voting as a waste of time.

With a raging war in Iraq that is largely unpopular, comparisons have been made to the Vietnam War era. But there are differences between Generation Y and the Vietnam Generation, Theiss-Morse said.

"People at that time were more engaged, and the voter turnout rate was higher in the '60s," she said. "With the Vietnam War, people felt they could make a difference and change U.S. history."

Theiss-Morse said now there is a feeling the government is so far removed from the public that people can't make a difference.

"There's more (young people inclined) toward volunteering in the community," she said. "That gives them a sense that they can make a difference, but it is not associated with politics."

Drew Dougherty, a senior political science and economics major at UNL, works for the Nebraska Republican Party as a field director and said there's been an increase in voter apathy.

"They (Generation Y) don't care about voting and that's part of a problem with schooling, society and their peers," Dougherty said,

He said that voter apathy has increased especially with Generations X and Y, and people think that it's wrong to talk about politics in conversations.

"We haven't had any instances that have riled everybody up and forced our generation to step up," Dougherty said. "Vietnam forced people to become more politically active, and our generation hasn't had that."
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