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Young Activists Inspired To Participate In Politics

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  • Young Activists Inspired To Participate In Politics

    YOUNG ACTIVISTS INSPIRED TO PARTICIPATE IN POLITICS
    By Eva Wolchover

    The Boston Herald
    January 21, 2009 Wednesday

    Young political activists say the excitement generated by Barack
    Obama winning the White House is living on past the ballot box,
    and changing the way they view politics.

    "I think a percentage of these volunteers and activists will stay
    involved in politics, higher than anyone expected," said Jirair
    Ratevosian, 28, of Boston, co-chairman of Armenian Americans for
    Obama and Biden. "People still feel that they're a part of it. And
    people want to stay involved because the rest is yet to come. The
    work hasn't even started."

    Obama won 66 percent of voters aged 18 to 29 in November.

    Some 54.4 percent of Americans under age 30 voted - just one percentage
    point lower than the all-time high for youth voter turnout in 1972 -
    and young voters constituted 18 percent of the overall electorate.

    The election seems to have struck a galvanizing chord, said Obama
    fund-raiser Alan D. Solomont.

    "The era of the baby boomer is over," he said. "There is a new
    generation that is more interested in politics, that has a greater
    belief that government can be a solution to our problems, that is
    less idealistic and more pragmatic and that is more comfortable in
    a diverse world."

    Student activist Emily Cunningham, 18, a senior at Cardinal Spellman
    High School in Brockton, agrees.

    "I think young people generally are more excited about politics"
    said Cunningham, who plans to work with the new administration as a
    leader of STAND, a national anti-genocide organization.

    The Obama team's extraordinary success in utilizing the Internet to
    recruit volunteers is likely to continue to attract young people, said
    Larry J. Sabato of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics.

    "Obama had loads of young people on his voter file," Sabato said. "He
    can certainly communicate with them."

    The candidate "was able to inspire younger people because he came
    down to their level - to social networking sites, like Facebook.com
    and Myspace.com," Ratevosian said, citing the new, interactive
    change.gov and whitehouse.gov sites as savvy ways to continue to
    court young supporters.
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