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Are young millennials fiscal conservatives?

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These mixed emotions help explain why this election is generating much less excitement on college campuses than there was in 2008.

"They're not fully committed to Obama. But they're not fully committed to Romney either," says Della Volpe, the pollster from Harvard.

Or perhaps they're not fully committed to the political process as a whole, but are turned off, as many young people note, by partisan bickering and gridlock.

A recent TRU poll found that more young people answered "don't know" or "don't care" when asked if they were liberal, moderate or conservative.

Six months after the 2008 election, 13 percent of teens and twentysomethings gave that answer. In a recent poll, that "don't know/don't' care" number rose to 27 percent for the entire age group — and to 36 percent for teens.

That could be bad news for those hoping to build on the last election's banner youth vote numbers. But Maue, at TRU, doesn't necessarily think it means they're disengaged.

"It may mean they're undecided," she says. "So it could go either way."

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Martha Irvine is an AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org or via http://twitter.com/irvineap

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