Area students support Obama


 

WINSTED — Students from Northwestern Regional High School and The Gilbert School participated in mock elections in the days before the nation’s official Election Day and Barack Obama proved to be the winner among area teenagers.

At The Gilbert School, 71 percent of students who voted in the mock election voted for Obama, who pulled in 219 out of 308 votes. McCain limped in with just 62 votes. Nader, a Gilbert alum, captured nearly 9 percent of the votes with 27.

Across town at Northwestern, 60 percent of voting students from Barkhamsted, Colebrook, Norfolk and New Hartford seemed to agree with Winsted students and awarded the win to Obama with 405 out of 677 votes. McCain captured 33 percent of the votes. Nader, who held a live radio broadcast at the school last month, managed to earn 7 percent of Northwestern’s votes.

Despite a challenging election season, Northwestern students appeared to remain Democratic supporters over the last nine months, with 58 percent of students choosing Obama as their candidate back in February during a mock primary election.

During the primary, 404 of 698 students were supporters of Obama. On Monday, 405 voted for Obama as president once again.

The biggest difference noted among students, according to exiting poll data, was the area in which they were most concerned for the sake of the nation. In February, 24.3 percent of students felt that Iraq was the most important issue in the election. Nine months later, after the crisis on Wall Street, 34 percent of students felt the economy was the biggest concern and just 13.4 percent felt Iraq was the most important issue in the election.

Additional polling statistics indicated that Sarah Palin, Republican vice presidential nominee, both hurt and helped John McCain’s campaign. Approximately 17 percent of Obama voters stated they switched their original support from McCain to Obama because of Palin. However, 53 percent of McCain supporters said Palin strengthened their support for McCain, with 50 percent of his support coming from the ninth-grade class.

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