Florida

CAMPAIGN 2012

First Lady fires up college crowds as campaign appeals to youth vote

 

In dueling camps, Michelle Obama and George P. Bush, son of Jeb Bush, reached out to college students in Gainesville and Tallahassee.

Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau

Florida became the battleground for the youth vote Monday, as Michelle Obama and the son of former Gov. Jeb Bush arrived within hours of each other on college campuses in Tallahassee and Gainesville hoping to drum up support for their candidates among pivotal young voters.

The first lady spoke to a standing-room-only crowd of 10,750 cheering supporters at the Stephen O’Connell Center at the University of Florida and then darted to Tallahassee to another packed house of 8,850 at the Leon County Civic Center.

“All our hard work, all the progress we’ve made is all on the line; it’s all at stake this November,” Obama told a rowdy crowd of supporters in Gainesville. “This election is even closer than the last one, and it could all come down to what happens in just a few battleground states like Florida.’’

She delivered a similar 30-minute speech in Tallahassee, and coached her audiences not to take a day off for the next 60 days and “work like you’ve never worked before.”

VOTES’ IMPORTANCE

Part pep talk, part get-out-the-vote drive, Obama’s remarks also underscored the importance of registering to vote by the Oct. 9 deadline in Florida.

Four years ago, she said, her husband won by 236,000 votes in Florida. “That’s just 36 votes per precinct,’’ she said. “That could mean just one vote in your neighborhood, in your dorm, in your apartment.”

The greeting was more subdued for George P. Bush, son of Florida’s former governor and nephew of the former president, as he launched his six-college bus tour on behalf of the Maverick PAC, a political action committee designed to increase activism among young Republican professionals.

About two dozen members of Florida State University’s Young Republicans Club greeted Bush for the first-of-its-kind event intended to counter the Democrats’ successful youth campaign four years ago.

In 2008, voters ages 18 to 29 turned out in record numbers and voted for Barack Obama 61 to 37 percent over John McCain. Bush estimates they also outspent Republicans 20 to 1 on the “digital campaign,” and the Maverick PAC hopes to match the effort. The group has raised about $200,000 from low-dollar fundraisers and its super PAC has collected another $1.4 million, Bush said, to finance an aggressive social-media campaign, Bush’s bus tour and a pro-Romney outreach effort.

“We feel if you make a physical presence, make an effort, they’ll come out,’’ Bush said to the small rally outside Doak Campbell Stadium.

Polls show Obama with an edge over Romney among voters ages 18-29, but the president has lost the support of large numbers of white young people.

The top priority for the millennial generation: job creation, according to a Harvard University poll. Affordable access to healthcare and lowering the tax burden tie as the next priority, the poll conducted in the spring found.

Today, the national unemployment rate among voters ages 18 to 29, at 17 percent, is more than twice the state average, and concerns over the fate of the economy and their future job outlook haunt many students.

CURIOUS STUDENTS

Lemane Delval, a graduate student at the University of Florida, stood in line two hours to get tickets for Michelle Obama’s event. But the food science major who voted for Obama in 2008 said more students went out of curiosity than fervor for the president.

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