US elections2022- Young voters saved the day for Democratic Party
63% young voters aged 18 to 29 voted for Democrats and prevented the red wave of Republicans to take clear majority in both Congress and Senate
63% of young voters aged 18-29 voted for Democrats in the US midterm elections 2022. The young voters played crucial role in holding on to some vulnerable seats. According to estimates from the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University’s Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, 27% of young people (ages 18-29) turned out to vote in the 2022 midterm election and helped decide critical races, wielding the growing power of a generation that is increasingly engaged even as many remain disillusioned about U.S. politics.This 2022
youth turnout is likely the second-highest youth turnout rate for a midterm
election in the past 30 years, behind only the historic 31% turnout in 2018.
Votes cast by young people made up 12% of all votes in this election, nearly
matching the 13% youth share of the vote from the 2014 and 2018 midterms,
according to National Election Pool surveys.
Nationally,
young voters supported Democratic House candidates by a wide margin: 63% to
35%. In several key Senate and gubernatorial elections, youth support for
Democratic candidates was even higher, as youth helped hold back a “red wave”.
The estimate
that 27% of youth (ages 18-29) cast a ballot makes 2022 the midterm election
with the second-highest youth voter turnout in almost three decades. The
researchers also estimate that Youth turnout was even higher in some
battleground states.
CIRCLE also
estimates that, in a group of nine electorally competitive states for which
exit poll data is available (Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, New Hampshire,
Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin), the aggregate youth voter turnout
was 31%.
“Young
people proved once again that they’ll turn out to vote and impact election
results, and their turnout in 2022 is one of the highest we’ve ever seen in a
midterm election,” said Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, Newhouse Director of CIRCLE.
“In many states, youth overcame changes to election laws that posed direct
barriers to participation and a lack of strong and continued investment in
youth registration. There’s both a big need and extraordinary potential to
continue building on this trend of strong youth voting by stepping up our
support for all youth to have a voice in our democracy.”
Young people
also continued their trend of strongly backing Democrats by wide margins and
having an impact on elections around the country. According to the National
Election Pool survey conducted by Edison Research, nationally 63% of youth
voted for a Democrat, and 35% voted for a Republican candidate to the U.S.
House of Representatives. That closely matches 2020 but represents a slight
shift from 2018, when 67% of youth voted for a Democrat and 32% for a
Republican.
Young voters
are far from monolithic in their political preferences, and youth vote choice
differed by race/ethnicity. Nationally, Black youth had an overwhelming vote
choice for House Democrats: 89% compared to 9% for Republicans. More than two
thirds of Latino youth voted for Democrats: 68% to 30%. Young white voters
backed Republican House candidates by a 10-point margin in 2020, but white
youth who voted in 2022 favored Democrats by a 58% to 40% margin.
In the
Pennsylvania Senate race, which Democrat John Fetterman won by a slim 3-point
margin, youth ages 18-29 preferred Fetterman 70% to 28%, compared to 55%
to 42% among voters ages 30-44, with voters over 45 preferring Republican
candidate Mehmet Oz.
In the Wisconsin gubernatorial election, Democratic Governor Tony Evers won
reelection by a 3-point margin. Young voters gave Evers extraordinary
support: 70% vs. 28% for Republican challenger Tim Michels. Voters 30-44
also preferred Evers by a slimmer 55% to 44% margin, while voters over 45
backed the GOP candidate.
In the Georgia Senate race that is headed to a runoff election, with both
candidates at 49% of the vote, youth backed Democratic incumbent Sen.
Raphael Warnock 63% to 36%. Voters ages 30-44 backed Warnock 56% to 41%, while
voters over 45 gave a majority of their votes to GOP challenger Herschel
Walker. Notably, the youth share of the vote in Georgia was 13%, slightly
higher than the national rate.
The youth
vote was also influential in the Michigan governor race and the Michigan ballot
question to enshrine the right to abortion in the state’s constitution, which
was approved.
Khalid Bhatti
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