Kerry-Edwards 2004
Last updated:
11/3/2004; 1:31:25 AM


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Wednesday, October 20, 2004

U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry (L) reacts to school children at Tipton Middle School in Tipton, Iowa, October 5, 2004. Kerry accused President George W. Bush of mismanaging the war in Iraq after a former top aide said the U.S. paid the price for not deploying enough troops after last year's invasion. Paul Bremer, the former administrator for Iraq, said in a speech this week that the U.S. intervention in Iraq was hampered early on by a lack of adequate forces and efforts to contain looting after the ouster of Saddam Hussein. REUTERS/Jim Young US ELECTION

Reuters photo

Children voted for John Kerry over "President" Bush, 57 percent to 43 percent, on Nickelodeon's Web site. The kids' vote on the Web site accurately reflected the winners of the past four presidential elections.

John Kerry wins kids' vote

On Nov. 2, will the adults be as smart as the children?

Here's an encouraging story from The Associated Press today titled "Kids Pick Kerry to Be the Next President":

NEW YORK -- Kid power! Democrat John Kerry is the winner, and the rest of the country should pay attention because the vote on Nickelodeon's Web site has correctly chosen the president of the United States in the past four elections.

Nearly 400,000 children and teens voted, and the results were released [today]. Kerry received 57 percent of the vote; President Bush got 43 percent.

Nickelodeon has been airing information on the Nov. 2 election, plus sponsoring debates where kids could put forth their views on the environment, the war in Iraq and terrorism. Some animated shows on the cable channel also have been focusing on the election.

Linda Ellerbee, who writes and hosts "Nick News," says their voting usually reflects their parents' views -- but not all the time.

"Every so often you get a kid that says, 'My parents are voting for X, but I'm voting for Y,'" she said. "It's amazing, the point when kids start forming their own ideas about issues."

Ellerbee said Nickelodeon has been traveling the country teaching about the election and the importance of being socially informed....

"If we can get kids interested earlier in voting, when they can legally vote, they will," she said. "They will run for office, they will be the candidates (that) people want to vote for."

Ellerbee, who will announce the results on "U-PICK Live" [tonight], said many children wonder why they can't vote in the real election.

"Kids aren't dumb, they're just younger and shorter," she said. "In fact, last election, a boy came up to me and said, 'We picked George Bush to win, and he didn't really win. Al Gore won the popular vote, so we were kinda wrong.' Quite an observation."

I find it interesting that so many American adults consider Bush's presidency to be legitimate -- I never have -- but that even a child can see that Bush's presidency is illegitimate.

While I'd love to see Kerry beat Bush by more than 10 percentage points on Nov. 2, I think that Kerry is going to beat Bush by fewer than 10 percentage points. I think it's going to be Bush 45 percent to 47 percent and Kerry 50 to 52 percent. 


9:49:19 PM    Discuss amongst yourselves []



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Last update: 11/3/2004; 1:31:25 AM.
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