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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The presidential election of 2004 rendered a stronger voter turnout than many of its predecessor; that this particular election served to create a political fervor of tremendous proportion is clear example of just how volatile the issues of war and the economy weighed upon voters of all ages, ethnicities and economic backgrounds. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLC2004Elec.rtf
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tremendous proportion is clear example of just how volatile the issues of war and the economy weighed upon voters of all ages, ethnicities and economic backgrounds. II. DEMOGRAPHICS According
to Michael Crane, author of The Political Junkie Handbook, there was an overall increase in voter support for Bush when comparing the presidential elections of 2000 and 2004, with some
of these rather significant in the higher percentage. For example, Bush drew sixty-one percent of votes from gun owners in 2000, yet earned the support of five percent more
by the 2004 election. Jewish and Catholic voters backed the incumbent president by an additional six and seven percent, respectively; by contrast, Bush lost favor of the Protestants by
four percent. The only other area where Bush lost support - if only marginally - was with the gay population, which dropped from twenty-five percent in 2000 to twenty-three
percent in 2004 (Crane PG). Myriad other statistics that comprise the vastness of voter response to reflect fifty-five percent of men voting for Bush, forty-four percent for Kerry; forty-eight
percent of women for Bush, fifty-one percent for Kerry. Bush was overwhelmingly supported by Caucasians at fifty-eight percent, while Kerry was the preferred candidate for African-Americans at eighty-eight percent.
In fact, other than the White vote, Kerry won out over Bush in all race categories (Election Results). There was a tremendous showing of younger age groups this election
as compared to those of the past, with fifty-four percent of the 18-29 age group backing Kerry; ages 30-44 swung the pendulum back to support Bush by fifty-three percent, with
Bush holding firm in all remaining age groups from thirty to sixty and over. From an economic point of view, those in lower income categories voted decidedly for Kerry,
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