These days, Ms. Verdugo is so busy working to pay off her student loans that she has not decided whether to register “as a Democrat, a Republican, or what,” she says.
Chad Tevlin, 19, a student trying to pay for college by cleaning
portable toilets in South Bend, Ind., cannot recall if he registered to
vote at all. “Pointless” is how he describes politics.
And Kristen Klenke, a music student in central Michigan, has decided to
skip this election altogether. “I know it sounds horrible,” said Ms.
Klenke, 20. “But there’s a lot of discouragement going around.”
In the four years since President Obama
swept into office in large part with the support of a vast army of
youth, a new corps of young men and women have come of voting age with
views shaped largely by the recession.
And unlike their counterparts in the Millennial generation who showed
high levels of enthusiasm for Mr. Obama at this point in 2008, the
nation’s first-time voters are less enthusiastic about him, are
significantly more likely to identify as conservative and cite a growing
lack of faith in government in general, according to interviews,
experts and recent polls. (Continues)
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