Youth Voters Made Their Voices Heard Amidst Record Turnout

Youth Voters Made Their Voices Heard Amidst Record Turnout




Despite an especially polarized, bitter election season — with reports of voter suppression and misplaced ballots; the continuous circulation of misinformation, including a misleading, preemptive declaration of victory by President Donald Trump; all cast in the long shadow of the continuous coronavirus pandemic — one shining success shines cuts via muck. A staggering collection of people turned out to cast their ballots and make their voices heard, including a significant assortment of millennial and Gen Z voters.


Though ballots are still being counted in key battleground states, like Pennsylvania and Michigan, to decide the outcome of a close race, voter turnout in 2020 has already exceeded that of the 2016 election. A projection by NBC News on Wednesday morning (November 4) showed that at least 159.8 million Residents of the
U.S. Voted, and over 100 million of these, representing more than 47 percent of registered voters in the nation, had been cast prior to Election Day. The projected vote would constitute over 66.8 percent voter turnout rate, a record high among eligible citizens since 1900.


But among the record-makers are young people ages 18-29, a powerful voting bloc that comprises approximately 20 percent of the nearly 240 million eligible voters In America. Millennials, who are usually mistakenly derided by pundits for political apathy, have more and more participated in voting since 2014, nearly doubling participation by 2018 to 42 percent. By last count, nearly 10 million young people have voted, according to the Center for Data and Statistics on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University.


And while, in general, young people generally lean blue — a May Pew Statistics Center report stated that 61 percent of Gen Zers recommended to vote Democrat, as instead of 22 percent that intended to vote Republican — that affiliation breaks down significantly across demographics of race and ethnicity. The voices of young people of color, in particular, may have the power to tip the scale one way or the other, especially in important swing states where votes are still being tallied.


In Arizona, a formerly red state where Biden leads at the time of this writing, CIRCLE reports that young, Latinx voters were 17 percent more likely than white youth to support the former vice president. In North Carolina and Georgia, young, white voters voted for Trump, while 90 percent of Black youth voted for Biden. And though Texas went red, as in 2016, 91 percent of Black youth and 73 percent of Latinx youth supported Biden.


So, it comes down to the last few swing states where votes are currently being tallied, and all that’s left to do is wait. Although no matter the outcome, one thing is certain: Young voters made their voices heard this election season.









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