http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110008831

The midterm election looms, and once again efforts begin afresh to
increase voter participation. It has become standard wisdom in American
politics that voter turnout is synonymous with good citizenship,
justifying just about any scheme to get people to the polls. Arizona is
even considering a voter lottery, in which all voters are automatically
registered for a $1 million giveaway. Polling places and liquor stores in
Arizona will now have something in common.

On the political left, raising the youth vote is one of the most common
goals. This implicitly plays to the tired old axiom that a person under 30
who is not a liberal has no heart (whereas one who is still a liberal
after 30 has no head). The trouble is, while most "get out the vote"
campaigns targeting young people are proxies for the Democratic Party,
these efforts haven't apparently done much to win elections for the
Democrats. The explanation we often hear from the left is that the new
young Democrats are more than counterbalanced by voters scared up by the
Republicans on "cultural issues" like abortion, gun rights and gay
marriage.

But the data on young Americans tell a different story. Simply put,
liberals have a big baby problem: They're not having enough of them, they
haven't for a long time, and their pool of potential new voters is
suffering as a result. According to the 2004 General Social Survey, if you
picked 100 unrelated politically liberal adults at random, you would find
that they had, between them, 147 children. If you picked 100
conservatives, you would find 208 kids. That's a "fertility gap" of 41%.
Given that about 80% of people with an identifiable party preference grow
up to vote the same way as their parents, this gap translates into lots
more little Republicans than little Democrats to vote in future elections.
Over the past 30 years this gap has not been below 20%--explaining, to a
large extent, the current ineffectiveness of liberal youth voter campaigns
today.

Alarmingly for the Democrats, the gap is widening at a bit more than half
a percentage point per year, meaning that today's problem is nothing
compared to what the future will most likely hold. Consider future
presidential elections in a swing state (like Ohio), and assume that the
current patterns in fertility continue. A state that was split 50-50
between left and right in 2004 will tilt right by 2012, 54% to 46%. By
2020, it will be certifiably right-wing, 59% to 41%. A state that is
currently 55-45 in favor of liberals (like California) will be 54-46 in
favor of conservatives by 2020--and all for no other reason than babies.

The fertility gap doesn't budge when we correct for factors like age,
income, education, sex, race--or even religion. Indeed, if a conservative
and a liberal are identical in all these ways, the liberal will still be
19 percentage points more likely to be childless than the conservative.
Some believe the gap reflects an authentic cultural difference between
left and right in America today. As one liberal columnist in a major paper
graphically put it, "Maybe the scales are tipping to the neoconservative,
homogenous right in our culture simply because they tend not to give much
of a damn for the ramifications of wanton breeding and environmental
destruction and pious sanctimony, whereas those on the left actually seem
to give a whit for the health of the planet and the dire effects of
overpopulation." It would appear liberals have been quite successful
controlling overpopulation--in the Democratic Party.

Of course, politics depends on a lot more than underlying ideology. People
vote for politicians, not parties. Lots of people are neither liberal nor
conservative, but rather vote on the basis of personalities and specific
issues. But all things considered, if the Democrats continue to appeal to
liberals and the Republicans to conservatives, getting out the youth vote
may be increasingly an exercise in futility for the American left.

Democratic politicians may have no more babies left to kiss.

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