Columbus
Dispatch...
Obama
woos young voters with plan
By Alex Stuckey
More
than 3,200 people erupted in
cheers and booming applause as President Barack Obama mounted the stage
at Fort
Hayes high school in Columbus. Spectators leapt from their seats or
stood on
their tiptoes to get a glimpse of the leader of the free world.
“Now
we’re rock ’n’ rollin’,” shouted
a woman from the crowd, as another plopped her grandson on the metal
rail for a
better look.
Among
those present were many young
people, eager to hear the man they admired inspire hope that there
might be a
chance for jobs.
“He’s
giving me hope,” said Tiffany
Randolph, 27. “I wanted to hear there could be jobs for me.”
In
her last year studying marketing at
Franklin University, Randolph is getting nervous about finding a job
when she
graduates and hopes the American Jobs Act will work in her favor.
Randolph
supported Obama in 2008,
among the 61 percent of voters ages 18 to 29 who voted for him,
according to
exit polls. He captured 66 percent of the youth vote across the country
that
year, according to the Pew Research Center.
But
as the 2012 election looms,
Obama’s support from young voters is slipping as the unemployment rate
escalates.
In
June, youth’s approval ratings of
the president dropped to 56 percent, according to an Allstate/National
Journal
Heartland Monitor poll.
“Every
child deserves a great school,
and we can give it to them,” Obama said. “We can create good jobs for
construction workers, teachers, unemployed veterans and young people.”
Randolph’s
hopes were elevated when
Obama spoke of who would benefit from this act.
“We
want to help young people find a
job next summer,” Obama said.
He
was met with cheers and chanting,
“pass this bill.”
While
Chanel Jack, 18, will vote for
Obama in 2012, she’s concerned his sagging support will hurt his
chances at
re-election.
“He’s
been fighting for reforms, but
(Congress) is not letting him go through with it,” said Jack, who is
studying
for her Associate of Arts at Columbus State Community College. “I think
people
should give him a break.”
This
year will be Jack’s first time
filling out a presidential election ballot, and she said she’s excited
it’s
Obama.
Kazi
Hurt, a 24-year-old esthetician,
was relieved to hear the president was trying to fix unemployment in
Ohio and
across the country.
Ohio’s
unemployment rate currently
stands at 9 percent, while the country’s falls almost in line with 9.1
percent.
“He’s
right, people need jobs,” Hurt
said. “It’s sad that people are struggling.”
Hurt
said Obama’s “for-the-people”
mentality is why she plans to vote for him
Read
it at the Columbus Dispatch
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