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?the Year of the Youth Vote?: Mccain and Obama Work to Attract Young Voters

Student Voters Look to Candidates for  Answers to Crisis in Student Loans and College Affordability

 

With  problems growing in the student loan industry, spurred both by an ongoing  credit crunch with its roots in the subprime mortgage crisis and by  congressional legislation that cut subsidies to lenders of federal student  loans, the affordability of a higher education has remained at the forefront of  young Americans’ minds this election year.

 

Increases  in college tuition continue to outstrip the rate of inflation. Families, hurt  by mounting unemployment and high gas and food prices, are applying for federal  grants and student  loans in record numbers.

 

Lenders,  crippled by troubles in the nation’s credit markets and by a lack of subsidies  that have made federal college loans largely unprofitable, are dropping out of  the federal student loan business and tightening credit criteria on their  non-federal private  student loans or abandoning these credit-based private loans altogether —  leaving thousands of families scrambling to find a source for their federal and  private student loans.

 

Students  needing private student loans to supplement the federal college loans they have been able to get can’t find  co-signers with credit scores high enough to satisfy lenders’ increasingly  stringent credit criteria. And parents, who historically have been able to  borrow against the value of their house or draw on their investments to provide  the additional financing their college children may have needed, have watched  their stock values and home equity evaporate in the post-subprime housing and  financial breakdown.

 

Making Their Voice Heard — Finally — at the  Polls

 

Against  this backdrop of a rocky student loan landscape and a still-distressed economy,  Barack Obama’s and John McCain’s proposals to boost college accessibility may  prove to be a deciding factor in swaying the emergent youth vote, those ballots  being cast by the normally non-voting 18- to 30-year-olds that have already  proven to be a powerful force on the road to this year’s electoral showdown.

“Frustrated  by feckless Washington, energized by the unscripted, pundit-baffling freedom of  a wide-open race, young people are voting in numbers rarely seen since the  general election of 1972 — the first in which the voting age was lowered to  18,” wrote David Von Drehle back in January, in his piece, “The Year of the  Youth Vote,” for Time magazine.

 

More than  6.5 million voters under the age of 30 participated in the 2008 presidential  primaries and caucuses, making the age group an important demographic for  presidential hopefuls Obama and McCain at a time when national polls show the  two candidates are statistically tied or separated by only single digits in the  race for the White House.

Both  candidates are eyeing the votes of this emerging voting population — “an  estimated 50 million Twittering, text messaging, iPod-toting young voters” — in  the final stretches of this year’s general election, writes The Nation columnist Andy Kroll.

 

Candidates Speak to Higher Education Issues  Affecting Young Voters

 

In their  quest to woo these young voters, the candidates have promoted education  platforms that could give them the edge they need among the country’s 16  million college students and their families.

 

Obama,  the Democratic presidential candidate, outlines a host of national education  proposals that span early childhood education to college; McCain, the  presumptive Republican nominee, focuses on supporting local education  initiatives and expanding virtual learning opportunities.

 

Both  candidates have taken a stand on three issues in particular aimed at promoting  college affordability and accessibility:

 

Federal Pell Grants. McCain encourages  incremental increases in federal Pell Grant awards that would better keep up  with the rising cost of a college education. Both he and Obama supported the  College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, which raised the maximum Pell  Grant award from $4,050 to $5,400.

 

Federal student loans. McCain backs the  expansion of the Federal Family Education Loan Program, which provides federal  subsidies to private lenders that offer government-backed parent and student  loans as a third-party provider. Obama wants to eliminate the FFEL program and  its subsidies, directing borrowers instead to the government’s Direct Loan  Program, in which families take out their federal college loans directly from the  Department of Education and which he maintains is less costly for taxpayers  than the FFEL program.

 

Public service programs. McCain  supports an expansion of the Teach for America program, which places college  graduates in low-income school districts across the country, under an  accelerated teacher-certification process. Obama has put forth the idea of an  American Opportunity Tax Credit, which would give students a $4,000 tax credit  toward a college education at a public college or university in exchange for  100 hours of public service. Obama also calls for an expansion of the Peace  Corps and AmeriCorps community service programs.

 

Obama Leading McCain in the Charge to Win  Over Youth Vote

With the  general election only two months away, the candidates have little time left to  get the word out to students that they care about the issues young Americans  are facing. And up to this point, Obama has clearly made more of a direct  effort than McCain to specifically target college students and other young  adults.

 

Between  Feb. 1 and July 31, Obama held 32 campaign events in college towns; McCain held  three. And the McCain campaign has yet to publicly announce an official youth  outreach or youth vote campaign director. Obama, on the other hand, has hired  former Rock the Vote political director Hans Reimer. Polls show Obama leading  McCain among young voters by 20 percent.

 

“Obama  has enjoyed impressive support from young people since entering the race, and  the chances of his throngs of voters inexplicably switching their allegiance  are about as good as McCain creating his own Second Life avatar,” Kroll writes.

 

While  young Republicans have complained that McCain hasn’t done enough to reach out  to the voters of Generation Y, the senator’s young supporters haven’t given up  hope.

 

Justin  York, a grassroots youth organizer for McCain in Florida and a junior at the  University of Central Florida, points out that Ronald Reagan, nearly McCain’s  age in 1984, won the majority of youth voters in his re-election bid and that  the first President Bush, at the age of 64, also captured the majority of youth  voters just four years later.

 

If McCain “can chip away at Obama’s commanding lead  among those 50 million young voters,” Kroll says, “it could mean the difference  between the slimmest of victories or a significant loss.”

Jeff Mictabor is an enthusiast on the topic of student loan issues in the news. He has been writing for the past 10 years for a variety of education publications. He now offers his writing services on a freelance basis.

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How many lies have McCain and Palin said combind?

The Bridge To nowhere

The Ad about sex ed to kindergartners

http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/off_base_on_sex_ed.html

McCain claimed that Obama’s health care plan would “force small businesses to cut jobs” and would put “a bureaucrat … between you and your doctor.” In fact, the plan exempts small businesses, and those who have insurance now could keep the coverage they have.

* McCain attacked Obama for voting for “corporate welfare” for oil companies. In fact, the bill Obama voted for raised taxes on oil companies by $300 million over 11 years while providing $5.8 billion in subsidies for renewable energy, energy efficiency and alternative fuels.

* McCain said oil imports send “$700 billion a year to countries that don’t like us very much.” But the U.S. is on track to import a total of only $536 billion worth of oil at current prices, and close to a third of that comes from Canada, Mexico and the United Kingdom.

* He promised to increase use of “wind, tide [and] solar” energy, though his actual energy plan contains no new money for renewable energy. He has said elsewhere that renewable sources won’t produce as much as people think.

* He called for “reducing government spending and getting rid of failed programs,” but as in the past failed to cite a single program that he would eliminate or reduce.

* He said Obama would “close” markets to trade. In fact, Obama, though he once said he wanted to “renegotiate” the North American Free Trade Agreement, now says he simply wants to try to strengthen environmental and labor provisions in it.

* Palin may have said “Thanks, but no thanks” on the Bridge to Nowhere, though not until Congress had pretty much killed it already. But that was a sharp turnaround from the position she took during her gubernatorial campaign, and the town where she was mayor received lots of earmarks during her tenure.

* Palin’s accusation that Obama hasn’t authored “a single major law or even a reform” in the U.S. Senate or the Illinois Senate is simply not a fair assessment. Obama has helped push through major ethics reforms in both bodies, for example.

* The Alaska governor avoided some of McCain’s false claims about Obama’s tax program – but her attacks still failed to give the whole story.

* Giuliani distorted the time line and substance of Obama’s statements about the conflict between Russia and Georgia. In fact, there was much less difference between his statements and those of McCain than Giuliani would have had us believe.

* Giuliani also said McCain had been a fighter pilot. Actually, McCain’s plane was the A-4 Skyhawk, a small bomber. It was the only plane he trained in or flew in combat, according to McCain’s own memoir.

* Finally, Huckabee told conventioneers and TV viewers that Palin got more votes when she ran for mayor of Wasilla than Biden did running for president. Not even close. The tally: Biden, 79,754, despite withdrawing from the race after the Iowa caucuses. Palin, 909 in her 1999 race, 651 in 1996.

http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/gop_convention_spin_part_ii.html

Am I missing anything?
Ro L all of this is quoted direct from factcheck.org

Feel free to check it.

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Is McCain shooting himself in the foot on the Ethonal Support?

In Corn Country, McCain Says No To Ethanol Support

DES MOINES, Iowa – Republican presidential candidate John McCain didn’t mince words Friday at the Iowa State Fair, telling corn producers he didn’t want to subsidize their ethanol but was eager to help market farm products around the world.

“My friends, we will disagree on a specific issue and that’s healthy,” McCain said as he stood near bales of straw at one of the nation’s premier farming showcases. “I believe in renewable fuels. I don’t believe in ethanol subsidies, but I believe in renewable fuels.”

McCain has never been shy about speaking against subsidizing ethanol when he is in farm country, though that stand helped to make him unpopular enough in Iowa that he skipped participating in its leadoff presidential caucuses in 2000 and put much less emphasis on them in 2008 than many of his opponents.

In a brief speech at the fairgrounds — where he viewed a 1,253-pound boar named Freight Train and looked for pork chop on a stick, a fair delicacy — McCain pledged to negotiate trade deals favorable to farm commodities.

“My mission and my job as president of the United States will be to make sure every market in the world is open to your products,” he said.

McCain met with Iowa Agriculture Secretary Bill Northey during his fairgrounds tour and promoted expanded pork exports as a boon to the nation’s leading hog-producing state. He said a free-trade deal with South Korea could boost profits by $10 a hog.

“Agriculture products here in the state of Iowa can feed the world and we’re not afraid to compete with anybody,” he said.

McCain said his visit gave him a chance to “meet and greet the real America.”

“This is the heartland of America, this is what America is all about, this is the people I want to know and meet,” he said.

Democrats in the state said McCain’s opposition to ethanol subsidies and the $300 billion farm bill would make it difficult for the Republican to win Iowa’s seven electoral votes and would hurt him throughout the Midwest. McCain called the bipartisan farm bill “bloated” and an example of the kind of spending measure he would veto as president.

“He voted against ethanol subsidies, he’s opposed to the farm bill,” Iowa Democratic Chairman Scott Brennan said. “What it proves is he doesn’t care about what’s important to Iowa.”

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080808/ap_on_el_pr/mccain;_ylt=AqyuE0quOMnntkBft6weBBADW7oF

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Obama vs McCain on ethanol?

Obama was a leading supporter of ethanol subsidies in 2005. McCain has fought these subsidies.

Now the US is coming around to see that corn based ethanol is a scam. It’s inefficient, it drives up costs, it reduces the food supply for the world.

Will McCain use this in the election to show that Obama supported the corn lobby and made a wrong decision for America?

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John McCain: Town Hall 07/30/08


John McCain Town Hall Aurora, CO 07/30/08 TRANSCRIPT: QUESTIONER: What are you going to do to help those of us who are in a situation financially where we can buy gas for our car- JOHN MCCAIN: A little closer. QUESTIONER: where we can buy gas for our car to go to work or we can buy groceries, one or the other. How are you going to help us? MCCAIN: On, on the price of food? QUESTIONER: And gas. We can’t do both. MCCAIN: Thank you. And obviously, as you know, they are connected. [...] They are not disconnected. And by the way, one of the inflationary impacts on the price of food is the subsidies on ethanol. My friends I went to Iowa in the first caucus, as you know, the first selection of the nominee of the party, and I said I’m against ethanol subsidies because it’s gonna distort the market, and it’s going to cause inflation, and indeed it did. By the way it lost Iowa. But there’s no doubt that the cost of energy has a direct effect on the cost of food. Some American’s today, particularly low income American’s my friends, are deciding whether to drive or to go to the grocery store because they can’t do both. Who is getting hurt the most by this price of a barrel of oil and the cost of a gallon of gasoline, the lowest income American’s who are driving the oldest automobiles. And so I can tell you that we need to immediately say and lift the moratorium on offshore drilling. Will that solve our problem? No, but it will help us tell the world that we are on the path reducing

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If McCain cares about the environment, why does he oppose renewable energy?

McCain consistently has voted consistently against government support of solar, wind, geothermal, bioenergy, ocean and any other clean energy, with the exception of being strongly for nuclear power.

McCain believes that clean energy like solar and wind are ineffective against climate change. McCain has many times expressed his sincere belief that only nuclear power can reduce greenhouse gases.

McCain refuses to support any carbon cap and trade legislation unless it contains massive nuclear subsidies – more than any other senators are willing to support.

On environmental legislation, McCain voted with James ‘Oil Man Global Warming is a Hoax’ Inhofe 42 out of 44 times, and with Barbara Boxer (most environmentally conscious senator) 1 out of 50 times.

http://www.matternetwork.com/2008/9/mccains-50-votes-against-clean.cfm

McCain has also missed 8 straight votes on extending the renewable energy tax credit, and would have voted against it had he attended.

http://climateprogress.org/2008/09/20/the-greenwasher-from-arizona-has-a-record-as-dirty-as-the-denier-from-oklahoma/

How can we believe that McCain is concerned about the environment as he claims:

“I have a long record of that support of alternate energy. I come from a state where we have sunshine 360 days a year…. I’ve always been for all of those and I have not missed any crucial vote.”

When his voting record is exactly the opposite of his claims? Do you buy into McCain’s claim that he cares about the environment? Why or why not?

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McCain Portsmouth Town Hall – Farm Subsidies


Senator John McCain discusses his opposition to farm subsidies during a town hall meeting in Portsmouth, Ohio.

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McCain just said that he would eliminate the ethanol subsidy and have fixed price military contracts.?

If he is elected do you think he will have a “heart attack” or some other “medical condition” that prevents him from taking office?
By my second question I mean do you think those that benefit from ethanol subsidies and open-priced military contracts will “help” him to develop a “medical condition” that prevents him from taking office. Please notice the quotation marks.

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I oppose a federal UHC, I beleive it is the states responbity. Where does Obama and McCain stand?

In a little more detail:

I definitely oppose a federal UHC, as I believe such programs should be decided and paid for by each state. I’m very firm on this.

But I would not be opposed to *limited* federal subsidies for poorer states, if they can show that they *need* the extra funds to establish a resonable program. I realize some states have a larger poor population.

Which candidate if any is closer to this view?

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John mccain: Farm subsidies


Arizona Senator and Republican presidential candidate John mccain met with The Des Moines Register editorial board Wednesday, October 24. mccain talks about his position on farm subsidies.

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