The 2012 election brings two very different candidates with two distinct plans for the country. Tuesday is the last chance to cast votes, but some people view this election very differently.

In a campaign where young voters are playing a big role, some students here on campus are choosing not to vote, even though they can. They have simply chosen not to support either candidate.

Senior Andrew Bronsteen will not be voting this election and said it's his right not to vote if he is not happy with either candidate.

"I am not voting in this election for numerous reasons," Bronsteen said. "I am registered to vote, but I am not voting in this election because I don't agree fully with one side. I think that parts of each one would combine to make a good president, but I don't like either one individually."

Senior Taylor Hughes agrees. Hughes voted in the election four years ago for Ralph Nader because he supported neither the Democratic nominee Barack Obama nor Republican nominee John McCain.

"With Barack Obama, you have a person that has had four years to kind of clean up a mess that I think he inherited from the past administration," Hughes said. "I don't think he's done an adequate job. I think that Mitt Romney for the most part is going to do the same, so I am just choosing to not vote because I think either candidate is going to do pretty much the same thing"