Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Voting groups seek out students

Youthful members add energy, engagement to all campaigns

- Bryan Anderson and Sara Burnett

RALEIGH, N.C. – Chase Gaines wishes he could get more young people in North Carolina to answer their front doors and take his GOP flyer.

Rick Hart longs for the days where he would wake up at 6 a.m. to prep for a day of campaignin­g in the streets of Atlanta to persuade his classmates to elect Democrats.

The two college students are on opposite ends of the political universe but facing the same challenge: reaching young voters when campuses are empty and students are scattered across the country.

“The pandemic really did hit us significantly,” said Hart, an unpaid student volunteer at Morehouse College who was working in Georgia on behalf of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, but is now back at his parents’ home in Laurel, Maryland. “The country kind of came to a shut down and we were like, ‘What do we do next?’ ”

Campaigns, advocacy groups and registrati­on organizati­ons say they’re still struggling to answer that question – and looking for creative, largely digital, solutions.

The coronaviru­s has forced many colleges to adopt online-only classes, eliminatin­g hopes of large in-person registrati­on drives on campus. Outdoor festivals, sporting events and other public gatherings are canceled, cutting off more easy access to college-age voters.

Groups dedicated to rallying young voters have worries that go beyond registrati­ons. With campuses closing, college students are especially transient, causing confusion about whether they should register at their home or school address. The shift to mail voting raises other unexpected hurdles for young voters, including a lack of familiarit­y with the U.S. Postal Service and even improper cursive penmanship that can lead to rejected votes.

“Younger voters are behind the eight ball to begin with, and COVID is just going to make it worse,” said Daniel Smith, a professor and chair of political science at the University of Florida, who has studied mail-in balloting.

All the these worries are a bigger headache for Democrats, who are more dependent on college voters’ support and, in a traditiona­l campaign, their volunteeri­sm. Voters under 30 made up 13% of the electorate in 2016, according to an analysis by Pew Research Center. This year, polls show that the age group favors Biden by a wide margin. And if they vote, they could also play an important role in Senate, House and downballot contests.

But traditiona­l outreach to college voters has been upended. There are no tables set up in many student unions or young people carrying clipboards at concerts and rallies, said Patrick Schuh, Michigan state director for America Votes, which supports Democratic candidates and progressiv­e causes.

“All of these visibility events are important. They show energy, they help with engagement,” Schuh said.

The Democratic National Committee and Biden’s campaign have greatly restricted staff travel, effectively eliminatin­g coordinate­d in-person voter contacts. The advocacy group NextGen America, which was founded by former Democratic presidenti­al candidate Tom Steyer to increase youth participat­ion, said it doesn’t have paid staff members on college campuses.

The initial impact was clear. In North Carolina, which President Donald Trump won in 2016 and Democrats are hoping to flip, registrati­ons among young people between 18 and 29 dropped sharply when the virus forced campus closures in March. That has begun to rebound.

Kate Fellman, executive director of the nonpartisa­n voter registrati­on group You Can Vote, said the organizati­on set a goal this year to register 30,000 people, 18 to 25, in the state. She said the team had 4,391 new registrant­s before the pandemic hit in mid-March. But in the four months since, the group registered just dozens of people.

Making up for that lost ground has meant getting creative. Individual students are turning to the social media platforms to persuade young people to register to vote. NextGen is sifting through Twitter to find potential voters and is directly messaging them. Some groups and campaigns have gone old-school, ramping up phone banking efforts and noting an increased rate of responses from young people stuck at home.

There are signs that college-age people are strongly motivated to participat­e in the election.

Of the 39 states for which it had reliable data, the Center for Informatio­n & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement found a majority of the states already have a higher number of young people now registered to vote in 2020 compared with November 2016; Battlegrou­nd states are all over the map.

The number of adult registrant­s between 18 and 24 in Georgia is 28% higher than it was in November 2016. Registrati­on is up by 13% in Texas, 10% in Arizona and 7% in Michigan, but down in Ohio by 17% and 10% in Pennsylvan­ia over the same period of time. Nevada, Florida and North Carolina nearly mirror the number of young registered voters before the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Republican campaigns have been more willing to conduct outreach in person. Trump campaign spokeswoma­n Samantha Zager said the campaign has 73 target campuses and more than 550 students working to assist with recruitmen­t, training and activation on campus and online.

“Our youth engagement efforts will continue both virtually and in-person,” she added.

Symone Sanders, senior campaign advisor for Biden, oversees a program that includes more than 300 chapters. The campaign said it will have hired staff members dedicated to campus voting in more than 10 battlegrou­nd states by the end of August.

But registerin­g college students to vote is just half the battle.

States set their own elections procedures and have wildly different policies for in-person and mail-in voting.

A student who registers to vote using a campus address could see dormitorie­s or other campus housing shut down due to an outbreak before being able to vote.

Voting by mail also has its challenges, with studies showing young voters are more likely than voters of other age groups to have their mail-in ballots rejected. Rejected ballots do not count when results are counted.

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