I'm a Millennial voter and I'm still for President Obama. Here's why:
President Obama signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, he signed a bill to expand veteran benefits, he signed kids tobacco legislation, he signed a land protection act, & SCHIP, gave the Cairo speech to the Muslim world which he followed up with this year appointing a special envoy, & has represented our country abroad (Europe seems to be pretty fond of him for the most part), he oversees an EPA that has shown it is willing to get tough on environmental issues via regulation if the congress won’t via legislation, he gave a widely watched education speech, he's advocated for science in our schools, & is for stem cell research, he's appointed a supreme court justice, he's ended torture, respects the Geneva Convention, and has plans to close Gitmo (albeit behind schedule after responding to facts on the ground), he's going to have us out or Iraq next year and starting to pulling out of Afghanistan (the one that actually attacked us) at the same time, and start disclosing all White House visitors so there is no wiggle room for defining lobbyists.
He has a way to go on gay rights but, he has done some things. On the gay rights front he has signed legislation such as the hate crimes bill, and ryan white care act, he has lifted the travel/immigration ban based on HIV status earlier this month, he has expanded federal benefits to gay spouses which is the largest employer in the US & in some sense sets the tone for many other employers, he's invited gay couples to public white house family holiday events (& to the State of the Union, the guest list even mentions a gay couple adopting), he's appointed openly gay officials as well as gay ambassadors. He's called for the end of Don't Ask Don't Tell on the campaign trail, again after taking office during the National Equality March weekend, and again very publicly in the State of the union. He said he would sign legislation relating to repealing DADT, the repealing of the Defense of Marriage Act, & enacting the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.
And then of course there is all the day to day of meetings & running the country. All of this without mentioning any health care reform efforts (like letting under 26 stay on their parents insurance while they look for that first full time job & complete the probationary period so that coverage doesn't lapse) or economic recovery efforts which are the areas that have seen the most work. And it wasn’t just keeping Wall Street from collapsing and creating jobs, but cash for clunkers which had an economic and environmental aspect to it, and first time home buyer subsidies (younger people have got to like that one), and so on. Combine that with recent efforts to get money back from the banks, and recent efforts to fight corporate rule, & fight the SCOTUS decision and I think he has more than a few important accomplishments.
You could make a list of all the pros and cons that both Dems and GOP have done, and you'd probably have a decent sized con list for both sides, but only one side has a pro list that long. And if my fellow young voters think sitting out this November election or voting in republicans is a solution to gridlock in Washington they are dead wrong.