Gen Z and millennial voters will account for nearly 40% of votes at the 2024 election, reports suggest.
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An exceptionally high turnout of young voters swung key state battles in favour of the Democrats in the 2022 US midterms. It鈥檚 estimated that more than a quarter of registered voters aged between 18 and 29 years of age in elections that saw the Democrats maintain control of the Senate and minimise Republican gains in the House of Representatives.
President Joe Biden thanked 鈥渢he young people of this nation鈥 for turning out in 鈥渉istoric numbers鈥. has indicated that 27% of young people voted, the second highest percentage in the last thirty years, beaten only by the record of 31% set during the .
by the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University, known as Circle, indicates that youth voter turnout was particularly high in battleground states such as Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
, Democrat Katie Hobbs won her governor鈥檚 race by 20,000 votes, with around 60,000 more young people voting for Hobbs than her rival Kari Lake. While , 79,000 more young voters chose Democratic governor Tony Evers and contributed towards his victory of 89,000 votes 鈥 88% of the margin of his victory 鈥 over Republican candidate Tim Michels.
鈥楾hey鈥檙e voting more鈥
The turnout was an illustration that this is the most politically engaged cohort of youth voters in recent history. Ruby Belle Booth, Circle鈥檚 elections coordinator, the 2022 midterms represented 鈥渉igh civic engagement鈥 among younger voters.
This assessment was echoed by Cristina Tzintz煤n Ramirez, president of NextGen, a youth advocacy non-profit and political action committee, : 鈥淭hey鈥檙e voting more. They鈥檙e participating in protests. They are more avid readers of politics and social issues.鈥
And when young voters did reach the polls they voted overwhelmingly for Democrat candidates across the country. , 63% of 18- to 29- year olds voted Democrat and 35% voted Republican in the House of Representatives elections. Voters between 30 and 44 split their vote between the two parties, while older voters tended to vote Republican.
Young black and Latino voters went Democrat
Exit polls also showed that ethnicity also played a key part in determining who to vote for. Black young people voted almost unanimously for the Democrats, while 67% of Latinos in this age group also chose them over the Republicans. This has added significance when read alongside the of newly eligible young voters for the 2022 elections: 2 million are Latino and 1.2 million are black out of a total of 8 million new voters.
Despite having a number of Latino Republican candidates across the country, that Latino voters would move to the right did not occur among young people. There was of this among older voters although it varies state by state.
In Texas, 53% of those aged 65 and over voted Democrat, while in Florida 64% voted Republican. In both states, however, those aged 18-29 preferred Democrat candidates: 56% in Florida and 76% in Texas. There is not a single trend for Latino voters, but that this is consistent with historic Hispanic voting patterns.
Abortion rights a key issue
While climate change and gun violence as key concerns for young voters, it was the issue of abortion rights that to have led to many voters casting a ballot this time around.
The supreme court鈥檚 to overturn the historic 1973 Roe v Wade ruling and the constitutional right to abortion it created. Exit poll data concerning the issues illustrate that this decision has prompted young voters to take to the polls, and they were the only age group to cite abortion as the major issue.
In addition to the congressional elections, that young voters turned out in large numbers to vote in state-wide referendum on abortion rights, minimum wage rates and voting rights. This may have contributed towards the failure of the forecast red wave of Republican victories .
Democrats courted the young
Another reason for such a high turnout among young voters could be the significant activity and record by Democrats.
, Democrats gained votes in the suburbs and outperformed Biden鈥檚 2020 campaign, particularly in rural areas. , engaging with 2.1 million youth voters in the state helped create Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman鈥檚 surprise victory over television personality Dr Oz.
as to what extent Biden鈥檚 cancelling of student debt had in voter support for the Democrats. It may have helped but this is unclear.
Future support may be influenced by the Donald Trump-appointed US district judge in Texas, Mark Pittman, who , bringing the programme to a nationwide standstill. It may take months for the supreme court to decide on the Biden administration鈥檚 appeal to the ruling.
A generational shift?
John Della Volpe, director of polling at Harvard Kennedy School鈥檚 Institute of Politics, that gen Z voters have emerged as an influential and active voting bloc. The Democrats, he believes, would do well to seek the vote of the 18鈥29 voters as 鈥淕en Z and Millennial voters will account for nearly 40% of votes鈥 at the 2024 election.
Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez agrees with Volpe鈥檚 assessment. She argues that the US is beginning to see the result of what a 鈥済enerational shift鈥 in American politics.
If the current trend in youth voter turnout persists, the 2024 election victory might be decided by their support. Republican stalwarts鈥 of Democrats' attempts to woo young voters, such as that of Senator Ted Cruz, has done nothing but indicate they are out of touch with the gen Z-millennial bloc.
Democrats hold a clear advantage with the young voters of today and that could prove to be significant, not just to their election chances in 2024, but also as an influence on the Democratic party.
is a Teaching Fellow in the School of in the .
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons Licence. .
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