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The Lighter Side of Election, Care of Candidate Zero
Click here to see if you've got the skills to be President - you know, the lightenin' quick arrow keys and the fearless ability to collect votes by eating stars in a maze while dodging voracious cartoon Democrats and Republicans. If you first collect a ticket, button, picket, or cup of coffee then you can win 50 votes by swaying each Democrat or Republican in your favor - AKA eating them Pac-Man-style. (Ms. Pac-Man-style for the ladies.) The game's wahka-wahka-wahka sound is worth it alone.
Nonpartisan Parody: CANDIDATE ZERO is a one-platform pol who knows how to bond with potential voters ("I've always wanted to try yoga"; "Tiramisu is never as good as you think it's going to be"). He's got his own bio ("I invented the after-hours party") and his own mockumentary clips from the mock campaign trail where he mockingly mocks about himself and our "beautiful land of freedom, where woodchucks can chuck and the deer can do...whatever it is that deer like to do." Added bonus: Real footage of a hopping monkey. It's a monkey. But it's hopping.
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Before moving on to the candidates' responses, please note:
NONPARTISANSHIP: From marketing only through strictly nonpartisan
media outlets, to creating an evenly split pre-moderating
panel of individuals and a nonpartisan moderating panel,
we exhaustively committed ourselves to keeping true
to our nonpartisanship. You can click
here to learn more about the vigilantly nonpartisan
process we used to reach millions of young Americans
and ultimately enable them to ask and choose these final
questions for the candidates.
PREVIOUSLY UNANSWERED QUESTIONS ONLY: The final questions don't
include all of the many concerns that are important
to young Americans. Indeed, we were inundated with questions
that had been repeatedly answered by the candidates
but rarely get air-time in the traditional debates.
After you've viewed the responses to these top 12 previously
unanswered questions, don't forget to also check
out the answers to those other common questions from
young Americans by clicking here.
Get Political and Published!
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election, and we'll help inspire other young Americans
to make it to the polls by publishing the best reasons
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Please note:
we'll never post your last name or contact info.
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Why a Presidential Youth Debate?
WHY? BECAUSE WE LIKE YOU. AND THEN THERE'S THIS: There are 24 million young
Americans in this country. That is a lot of us. Even
so, it makes sense that the campaign ads and what goes
on in Washington are so targeted to older voters. They
vote. In fact, in the 2000 election 36% of people our
age voted and 70% of older voters turned out on Election
Day. So we here at The New Voters Project - the largest
grassroots youth voter mobilization campaign in history
- decided to do something about it. Our plan has a few
somethings, actually: [ Read More
]
Debate Schedule and Moderating Panel
Following is a schedule of how the debate works:
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Thu., 9/16 - The Presidential Youth Debate began and we started collecting debate questions from 13-35 year olds nationwide. We received over 5,100 in total, with over 4,300 of those coming in the final four days alone.
- Mon., 9/27 - 4pm EST, we stopped accepting
questions. - Moderating
panel organizations, along with our lead moderator
Farai Chideya, received the top 50 questions and nominated
their top 20 from 18-35 year olds and their top 5
from 13-17 year-old "Future Voters." [Read
more about our vigilantly nonpartisan moderating process.]
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Tue., 9/28 - Nominations were tallied.
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Wed., 9/29 - Top 20 questions were posted to this site for 18-35 year olds to choose the 10 they most want answered by President Bush, Senator Kerry and Mr. Nader, and the top 5 from 13-17 year olds were posted so these Future Voters can choose their greatest concern.
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Tue., 10/5 - Question voting ended at noon (EST) - Along with one question from our lead moderator Farai Chideya, we sent the candidates the 12 previously unanswered questions that most concern young Americans, and requested well thought-out, accurate answers returned from them within one week, as they've previously agreed to do.
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Tue., 10/13 - The candidates' responses were posted to site, and they were given one week to add their rebuttals of 500 words or less.
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Tue., 10/20 - Rebuttals were added to the original responses, finally giving young Americans the unique answers they need to vote for the future they want. Americans of all ages will also have their last pre-Election look at how the top candidates responded to the same previously unanswered questions.
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Tue., 11/2 - Voters elected a President.
Narrowing down all of the great questions submitted by our nation's youth
is not an easy task. . . [ Read More
]
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On behalf of our nation's youth, we thank the following partners for helping us spread the word:
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