Mitchell Brown
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Charlie what you've done is incredible here.
Charlie what you've done is incredible here.
Again, great impact that you had. We have three or four awesome numbers for you here. And so what we went and did was I knew how impactful this was just by the vibe we were seeing on the college campuses now compared to 2020. And so I went back and I went... And I wanted to see how people were actually responding on the ground.
Again, great impact that you had. We have three or four awesome numbers for you here. And so what we went and did was I knew how impactful this was just by the vibe we were seeing on the college campuses now compared to 2020. And so I went back and I went... And I wanted to see how people were actually responding on the ground.
So we went in first and asked voters under 30 in all seven of the swing states what they thought of Turning Point, what they thought of Charlie, and how often they were seeing them. So you have a 49% name ID with voters under 30 in the swing states. Turning Point has a 47% name ID. And both of you are overwhelmingly positive with voters there.
So we went in first and asked voters under 30 in all seven of the swing states what they thought of Turning Point, what they thought of Charlie, and how often they were seeing them. So you have a 49% name ID with voters under 30 in the swing states. Turning Point has a 47% name ID. And both of you are overwhelmingly positive with voters there.
To put that into perspective, Trump is underwater with voters under 30 in those swing states, and you are above water. So to show the impact of it not just being Trump down, it's other conservative voices. So we went and asked those people, and of those people, 37% of those people said they saw, read, or heard something from Turning Point this election cycle.
To put that into perspective, Trump is underwater with voters under 30 in those swing states, and you are above water. So to show the impact of it not just being Trump down, it's other conservative voices. So we went and asked those people, and of those people, 37% of those people said they saw, read, or heard something from Turning Point this election cycle.
And of that group, 58% of them said it was more likely to make them vote for Donald Trump this year. So what that means by location stop. So we'll jump out with this first one here. I went and polled the polling precincts of the seven largest schools that you stopped at in swing states. And we checked what the turnout shift was from 2020 to 2024 and what that margin shift was.
And of that group, 58% of them said it was more likely to make them vote for Donald Trump this year. So what that means by location stop. So we'll jump out with this first one here. I went and polled the polling precincts of the seven largest schools that you stopped at in swing states. And we checked what the turnout shift was from 2020 to 2024 and what that margin shift was.
I'm gonna start with the biggest, Penn State University. Turnout, 42% higher than in 2020. The margin shift, 17 points to the right. So we turned out more voters and did better with them. Correct. Now, Westchester University, 19% higher turnout, 15% movement to the right. University of Wisconsin at Madison, 13% higher turnout, 11% shift to the right. I can go through all of these.
I'm gonna start with the biggest, Penn State University. Turnout, 42% higher than in 2020. The margin shift, 17 points to the right. So we turned out more voters and did better with them. Correct. Now, Westchester University, 19% higher turnout, 15% movement to the right. University of Wisconsin at Madison, 13% higher turnout, 11% shift to the right. I can go through all of these.
Georgia State University, 13% higher turnout, 14% shift to the right.
Georgia State University, 13% higher turnout, 14% shift to the right.
It's a cause and effect, and we can talk about it on a longer forum next time. But we even saw this result is this is just the kids who stayed in their college town to vote, not kids from a different state that were going to these schools, not kids who voted in their parents' home precincts where they're registered. So that's also something to factor in here. But this shift is monumental.
It's a cause and effect, and we can talk about it on a longer forum next time. But we even saw this result is this is just the kids who stayed in their college town to vote, not kids from a different state that were going to these schools, not kids who voted in their parents' home precincts where they're registered. So that's also something to factor in here. But this shift is monumental.
For example, the shift with this voter group from 16 to 20. is almost none. If you went to these college campuses, I went back and looked, there was only three that had higher turnout in 2020 than they had in 2016. And only one shifted to the right. And it was by one point from 2016 to 2020.
For example, the shift with this voter group from 16 to 20. is almost none. If you went to these college campuses, I went back and looked, there was only three that had higher turnout in 2020 than they had in 2016. And only one shifted to the right. And it was by one point from 2016 to 2020.
Correct. And you guys changed the conversation. So of this group, again, voters under 30 in these swing states, one, 81 percent of their media consumption is online or in social media. It's not none of its legacy media. And the second part is for voters, their first time voting Gen Z voters. Abortion was 25 percent of people's top choice. Inflation was 25 percent and cancel culture was 20 percent.
Correct. And you guys changed the conversation. So of this group, again, voters under 30 in these swing states, one, 81 percent of their media consumption is online or in social media. It's not none of its legacy media. And the second part is for voters, their first time voting Gen Z voters. Abortion was 25 percent of people's top choice. Inflation was 25 percent and cancel culture was 20 percent.