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flamingdem

(39,319 posts)
Tue Sep 25, 2012, 04:50 PM Sep 2012

More and More (Boomers), in Obama’s Corner - NYT

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/24/booming/24winerip-booming.html?_r=0



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This time, Mr. Tennyson says he’s voting for President Obama, a shift that a sizable number of his fellow boomers are making, according to recent polling data.

He’s angry about the Republicans’ talk of changing Medicare from government sponsored to a private voucher program. Though Mr. Romney swears it’s not so, Mr. Tennyson also fears that the Republicans will alter Social Security. “I’m going to need Medicare and so are my kids,” said Mr. Tennyson, who has three children ages 29 to 39. “I’ve been paying money into Social Security the last 40 years, and it’s all I’m going to have to retire on — I don’t want to hear a word about privatization. Not Medicare, not Social Security.”

Mr. Tennyson is one of the 78 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964, known as the baby boom generation. In the most recent New York Times/CBS News poll, likely voters in roughly that age group favored Mr. Obama by 9 percentage points. In a Pew Research Center poll of likely voters, Mr. Obama is ahead, 50 to 44 percent, within that age group.

“This is a significant change, and that generation’s vote counts for a lot,” said Scott Keeter, director of survey research for Pew. The boomers, who range in age from 48 to 66, account for 37 percent of all voters, according to Pew. Generation X — roughly 31 to 46 — makes up 26 percent. The youngest voters, ages 18 to 30, and the oldest, over 65, make up 17 percent each.

The apparent shift could be offset by a softer level of support for Mr. Obama among the youngest voters, in the 18-to-29 age group, of whom 66 percent went for him in 2008, and potentially lower turnout.

What is moving the baby boom voters? It may be Medicare.

On Friday, at the AARP convention in New Orleans, the Republican vice presidential candidate Paul D. Ryan was widely booed when he mentioned repealing “Obamacare” and privatizing Medicare.

The Great Recession had a major impact just as the older boomers were approaching retirement. The typical household income for those 55 to 64 has dropped nearly 10 percent since the recession, to $55,748 from $61,716, the biggest decrease of any age group.
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More and More (Boomers), in Obama’s Corner - NYT (Original Post) flamingdem Sep 2012 OP
Glad the REAL news is getting through Cha Sep 2012 #1
ha! great stuff, Granny says AARP YOU Ryan! flamingdem Sep 2012 #2
BOOM! tanyev Sep 2012 #3
Boom! Boom! - John Lee Hooker flamingdem Sep 2012 #4
Good article thanks! gopiscrap Sep 2012 #5
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