Results
2008 Election
New Voter’s Project organizers and students employed a wide variety
of old-fashioned pavement-pounding with new tech tools—from Facebook to
"text out the vote" tables—to urge young people to get to the polls. In
part due to our work, young voter turnout surged more than 2.2 million
votes compared to 2004 levels. For the first time in 20 years, the
young voter share (18- to 24-year-olds) of the electorate surpassed
that of voters over 65.
2008 Primaries
In the summer of 2007, we launched our "What’s Your Plan?" campaign.
We used fundraisers, town hall meetings and photo ops in the early
primary states to ask the candidates to talk to young people about the
issues we care about. Pairing new technology with classic organizing,
we also launched big voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives
across the country to show that on-the-ground efforts to reach young
voters work. Across the country, we mobilized 500 volunteers in 28
states to ask the candidates about their plans on issues such as global
warming, college affordability, health care and financial security. We
also recruited and trained 250 "Caucus Rock Stars" in Iowa to mobilize
5,000 of their peers. In part due to our efforts, youth turnout more
than doubled in the 2008 primaries.
2006 Elections
In fall 2006, the New Voters Project worked on 80 college campuses
in 22 states to boost voter turnout. The Center for Information and
Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) measured the turnout
increase between 2002 and 2006 in student-dense precincts where we and
other partners focused our efforts. The analysis focused on a set of 36
precincts in Ohio, Connecticut, Iowa, Colorado, and Michigan and found
that average turnout in those precincts increased by 157 percent over
2002. Nationally, the increase in youth voter turnout was four times
the rate of the general population’s increase (4 percent for youth, 1
percent overall).
2005 Elections
The New Voters Project focused on youth voter registration and
turnout in eight states in 2005. We registered more than 18,000 voters and
made more than 48,000 get-out-the-vote contacts.
2004 Elections
In 2004, the New Voters Project succeeded in becoming the largest
grassroots youth voter mobilization effort in this country's history.
We registered over 500,000 18-to-24 year-olds to vote, and contacted
more than 500,000 young registered voters during the get-out-the-vote
phase of the campaign.