Young Elected Officials Network

This Week on Future Majority: Tons of Guest Bloggers

I’m heading off the grid for the next week to take a much needed vacation. In my absence, I’ve arranged for a number of guest bloggers to join us from some really great progressive organizations including Living Liberally, the Bus Federation, the Young Elected Officials Network, Democrats Work, The League, Swing Semester, the Young Democrats and more. Along with Kevin and Alice, who will continue their regular blogging, these great guests willll take care of you through the holiday. Treat them well and leave lots of comments. I’ll be back July 7th.

Also, don’t forget that user diaries/blogs are now enabled. You could always throw your own .02 into the discussion and write a blog. Just login (or create an account) and click “Create Content” in the personal navigation menu at the top of the page. Some folks like the Sahar Massachi from the Roosevelt Institution and George Colli, who is running for CT state senate, have already done so and found themselves on the front page. Kevin and Alice will have their eyes out for good user-generated content to promote while I’m on break.

Young Elected Officials Network

This week People for the American Way hosted their Young Elected Officials Network conference in Little Rock, Arkansas. No, not because Bill and Hillary Clinton were hoping to lock the superdelegates in a room and placed a chip in the back of their necks. But because young elected officials are different from those regular ol elected officials.

More than 150 elected officials age 35 and under, descended upon the Clinton Library to share their experiences, policy initiatives and best practices, and build a lasting network with their fellow young elected officials from across the country.

My friend Jason Croucher, Councilman to Osage City, Kansas, was in attendance and it can be said that the conference had such an impact on him that it has changed his outlook on his position and on politics.

It can be said that Jason for all his youth and idealism was a fairly establishment kind of Democrat who only recently began to dabble in the internets.

With his iPod touch Jason sent me sporadic updates mostly saying how awesome it was.

Jason Update 8:

"Very standard campaign training but bent toward the specific issues, challenges and culture young people experience and understand first hand... The trainers were very outside the box. The best organized training i ever attended. Truly seamless."

Jason Update 6:

"This conference is exactly the sort of thing that you would love- dozens of your progressives all together out of a common desire to do good. It really is moving."

Of the lectures the most interesting to me was the one about new media. I think there is a huge disconnect between candidates and parties when it comes to bringing them to the internet, so I was curious how PFAW would conduct a lecture like this but further how young officials would connect with it.

Jason Update 2:

"They did a workshop on net stuff this morning that was pretty good. Saying it isn't enough just to have a web site, talked about using social networking and just treating it like any other kind of organizing. It wasn't great and was honestly over a lot of heads.

Something thats kind of surprising is that that young progressive electeds are pretty establishment in how they view politics- even though they all have facebook they don't think of it as a tool for campaigning."

One way in which young electeds are just like all the others.

Regardless, Jason told me it was new and original and certainly non-establishment. Jason said he was a minority in that respect, and that he understands "it" now. Clearly he's been converted him to our technology loving youthy ways.

Talking About the Youth Vote

Kevin Bondelli has agreed to join the crew here at Future Majority. He'll be writing on Mondays (and I hope more frequently than that). If you like Kevin's writing, you can also check out his personal blog. I'll have a bio up for Kevin on the About page shortly. --Mike

Haven't you heard? A strange phenomenon has taken place in 2008: the youth vote has spontaneously materialized after years of non-existence. There must have been something in the water fountains on college campuses, or maybe Barack Obama has a magic flute, the pied piper of disinterested millenials. Nobody could have anticipated these levels of youth participation.

The previous paragraph pretty much sums up the general response of the media and political pundits to the record-shattering turnout of youth in this year's Democratic primaries and caucuses. They seem to be blind to the fact that youth turnout has been steadily increasing since 2002, largely due to the efforts of youth organizations like the Young Democrats of America, Young Voter PAC, the Hip Hop Caucus, and many others.

Over the years campaigns have ignored young voters because they were not likely to vote, and youth were not likely to vote because they were never contacted by campaigns. This self-fulfilling prophecy over the years had left many young people feeling ignored, unimportant, and helpless. Helpless because politicians were more likely to vote for things that were at the expense of young Americans over any other demographic due to the low risk of electoral consequences. The young activists that attempted to lobby against such actions were almost always unsuccessful, it being hard to recruit supporters when years of experience made such efforts seem futile, and with the elected officials convinced that the youth would once again fail to turn out in significant numbers.

Organizations like the Young Democrats of America knew that the American youth were not apathetic, only disengaged. Youth peer-to-peer programs were developed and it was confirmed by research that such programs were extremely effective at increasing youth turnout. The success of these programs led to increased funding of youth organizations, now seen as an important investment for the progressive movement. The increase in resources allowed youth organizations to implement their programs in more places and improve their methods from experience. More and more young people were getting engaged. The movement was building.

Organizations such as the Young Elected Officials Network and Young People For were recruiting and training young candidates to run for school boards, city councils, state legislatures, and even federal office. Young people who previously had no ties to politics were seeing their friends and peers running for office, and winning.

Campaigns had been unwilling to use its resources to contact young voters partially because of the relative cost and difficulty of successfully making contacts using traditional methods. Web 2.0 and social networking has dramatically lowered these barriers to contacting young voters. Peer-to-peer and word of mouth contact are facilitated by social networks such as Facebook and Myspace. The groups and events functions of these networks make it much easier for youth to organize themselves and recruit their friends. Youth organizations have been able to coordinate their offline and online efforts to reach a mass of young voters that would have not been possible without these advances in technology.

So finally we come to the question "Why is the increase of youth participation so dramatic in 2008?" First, as I illustrated in my previous paragraphs, the youth vote movement has been building up to this since 2002. Second, the failures of George W. Bush and the Republican Party combined with the quality of the Democratic candidates have motivated many young people into action. Third, the Presidential campaigns have learned from the successes of youth organizations. They hired youth outreach staff, addressed the issues that are most important to youth, created youth constituent groups within their campaigns, and have taken advantage of new media and social networking. Finally, the youth organizations that have been building this movement are stronger than ever.

We as young activists have to be careful not to fall into the trap of implying that the increases in voter turnout this year is only the result of a single campaign, or that 2008 is an anomaly. By not acknowledging the history of this movement, by allowing the youth vote to appear to be merely the characteristic of a single campaign, or by forgetting the youth turnout increases since 2002, we run the risk of inadvertently perpetuating the idea that the youth vote is an ephemeral phenomenon. 2008 is not a fluke, it is a culmination of years of effort and effective strategy, and the youth movement will continue to strengthen and build, from the primaries, to the general election, and onward.

The Progressive Leadership Pipeline at Work

I'm catching up on my reading this week and just caught this post by Matt Stoller of Open Left in which he praises the emerging progressive leadership pipeline.

Good Progressive Movement Happenings:

Today, I learned that Ezra Temko was just elected to the Newark City Council in Delaware. Temko's slogan was 'Economic Progress, Environmental Sustainability, Responsive Representation'. He ran a grassroots campaign and knocked on every door in Newark. He also graduated from college in 2006, and comes out of the Young People for the American Way training program. He is now entering the Young Elected Officials Network, another People for the American Way program.

It takes a long time to develop and nurture talent, to learn how to run campaigns and to build support networks to make sure that progressive policies follow the election of progressives. You can just look at the collapse of congestion pricing in New York City to see how electing Democrats, even progressive ones, and keeping them unconnected to larger networks will prevent us from reaching our goals. Conversely, looking at FISA or net neutrality shows us that the networks we are building become much stronger than their individual parts.

Young People for the American Way and the Young Elected Officials Network deserve a congratulations today. They set their sites four years ago on building the next generation of leaders, and they are here, running organizations, and getting elected. And three other fellows from Young People for America have announced their candidacies for local elections, including a native American in South Dakota.

Building diverse leadership is going to take decades, but the payoff is going to be a kinder, saner, and gentler world. It's what we've all been working towards. If you date the founding of our movement in 1998, with the creation of Moveon, and you look at the creation of organizations like YP4 and YEO just four years ago, you can see that it's really happening. People like Ezra Temko, Daniel Biss, and Darcy Burner are already showing remarkable levels of leadership, and showing all of us that our work, our effort, our energy, our invested money, is showing signs of real impact.

Matt is right that sometimes it is hard to see the consequences of our actions. What we're doing is building power and talent gradually, year by year. But as hard as it is to see at times, it is happening thanks to YP4, YEO, and many many more organizations. We should take the time to highlight these successes as much as possible.

The Young Elected Officials Network has over a hundred candidates in its network. YP4 has hundreds of fellows that are currently enrolled or graduates of its program. GOTV focused groups have turned out young voters in ever increasing numbers for two straight elections. The League and it's partner group Opportunity Maine passed major legislation boosting college affordability and student debt relief for young people in their state.

What other success stories are out there that haven't received their due attention?

Moving Millennials into Elected Office

Cross-posted at MyDD and Daily Kos

A few weeks ago I wrote about the Long March - the movement of Millennials into positions of political power. At the time, I didn't know how many young people occupied elected office. I've got some actual numbers now, courtesy of Andrew Gillum, Executive Director of the Young Elected Officials Network, and, surprisingly, we may well be ahead of the curve.

Strauss and Howe predicted that by 2019, Millennials would occupy 5% of government leadership positions. According to the Young Elected Officials Network website, 18-35 year olds currently occupy 4.8% of all elected officials, from congress and governorships down to the school board level. While that age bracket doesn't totally track with Millennials (28/29 and under), it's an encouraging number. Andrew himself is a Cusp Millennial. He's 27 years old and, along with his duties as ED of YEO, he's the city commissioner of Tallahassee Florida, a position he's held since the age of 23.

According to Andrew, the Young Elected Officials Network is currently comprised of 318 elected officials under 36 years of age. And they occupy a wide range of offices:

Young Elected Officials Network

Body: 

History

Organizational Structure

Programs

Contact

Testimonials

New (to us) Youth Groups

I just added two new youth groups to the "Young Progressives" block in the sidebar. SNAP looks particularly interesting as it fills a gap the we've identified in multiple posts here at Future Majority - permanent infrastructure that can serve as an entry point into progressive politics.

Students for a New American Politics

SNAP PAC is the Students for a New American Politics political action committee, a federal PAC. SNAPPAC is working to provide stipends for as many students as possible to work as full time grassroots organizers on progressive Congressional Campaigns for 10-12 weeks during Summer 2006. As students, we bring the energy and enthusiasm needed to promote democratic participation in communities across the country and to strengthen the progressive voice in Washington.

Young Elected Officials Network

The YEO Network supports elected leaders ages 35 and under, as they define issues, develop solutions, and respond to the needs of their communities. By exchanging ideas, developing leadership skills and connecting with policy development organizations, YEO Network members will be empowered to transform their political vision into progressive action.

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