Will young voters turn out for the midterms?
With midterm elections three days away, community organizations — and candidates — are hoping their efforts to activate an underrepresented groups of voters worked this year. Luckily, national trends already show young voters are more likely to vote in the 2018 midterm elections than in years past.
A survey by the Education Week Research Center of 18- and 19-yearolds, 66 percent of whom have never voted in an election before, found that 63 percent planned to vote in the midterms.
Participants said they mainly planned to vote because they think it is good for the country, it is their civic duty or they were influenced to vote by their views — both positive and negative — of President Donald Trump’s administration, said Holly Yettick, director of the Education Week Research Center.
These motivations to vote are exactly what some local organizations, including the League of Women Voters and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga have been working to engage throughout this election cycle.
“For the last 20 years, we’ve been studying get-outthe-vote efforts and mobilization efforts,” said Amanda Wintersieck, a political science professor at UTC. “The scientific literature is clear, if you can give people a psychological attachment to their democracy, then that increases engagement, so the way we are trying to increase the psychological attachment is this idea of vot[ing] together, so let’s go as a group and elevate our citizenship.”
Despite decades of movements like Rock the Vote and Get-Out-The-Vote, that are aimed at increasing youth turnout, Wintersieck said that in the 2010 midterms only about 70 percent of UTC students were registered to vote. Even fewer actually voted — only 40.6 percent.
“This is interesting, because it was 10 percent less than the national average, and we are also below our peer institutions,” she said.
Allison Syrus, a senior at UTC said she thinks many younger voters don’t believe their vote actually matters.
“I see a culture of noninvolvement, this apathetic attitude that it doesn’t really matter,” Syrus said. “I do think they misunderstand the notion of elections.”
Nationally, young voters who don’t plan to vote often cite not knowing how to register or how to vote, where to register or being informed about the candidates as reasons they don’t vote.
Since Hamilton County’s August general election, 9,339 people have registered to vote, with 3,542 of them, or 37.9 percent, being aged 18 to 24. Of the county’s total 206,945 registered voters, 17,763 or in the 18-24 bracket, or about 8.5 percent.
The local chapter of the League of Women Voters, a nonpartisan organization aimed at encouraging voting and civic engagement, has been working steadily to increase awareness among young voters in Hamilton County.
For the duration of early voting, Maria Sabin, the local chapter’s secretary, stood outside the McKenzie Arena on UTC’s campus, directing students to early voting locations or educating them on voting in general.
“I’ve had so many tell me, “Oh, I can vote early?” Sabin said. “They’re such a huge population [in Hamilton County]. Our primary mission is to encourage the entire community to participate in politics and in the election process.”
Young people who did indicate they were planning to or already had voted, were more likely to be suburban, identify as liberal, have attended a private high school and were engaged in civic-related activities, according to the Education Week Research Center’s report. Many also cited school shootings as a top concern — a topic that gained traction locally this spring when students walked out of schools and called for gun control reform after the Valentine’s Day shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida.
However, the topic of gun violence has not seemed to drive young voters in the Chattanooga area to the polls.
Some faculty members at UTC have been studying voter participation and have led a variety of initiatives this year to increase engagement, Wintersieck said.
“Given the highly partisan nature of politics, we feel strongly that we need to demonstrate good democratic norms in a non-partisan way,” she said.
Voter registration drives, offering transportation on primary days, and the “Exercise Your Right” initiative these past weeks have been among them. On Election Day, UTC and the Student Government Association are hosting the Mocs Go Vote 2018 event for students, as well as providing two rented vans to help transport students to the polls.
“I think a lot of people genuinely believe their vote doesn’t matter,” said Camden Eckler, a junior at UTC and a member of the Student Government Association. “Its hard for me to sympathize with people who say, ‘Oh, I don’t have time … For the people who say their vote doesn’t count, it’s because they aren’t going out and voting.”
As SGA’s Government and External Affairs Committee chairwoman, Eckler has been involved in creating the initiative to increase voter turnout. She said she couldn’t speak for the group, but on a personal level, the effort has been an important one.
“During the presidential elections in 2016, I wasn’t old enough to vote yet, but I remember people complaining and then not going out to vote,” she said. “I think voting is one of the most powerful ways that you can protest. Just go vote. ”Mayor Andy Berke and the Mayor’s Youth Council also held a forum earlier this fall focusing on ways to get more young people involved in the election process, including events and initiatives that high school students could host in local schools.
On Aug. 29, they hosted Jason Kander of Let America Vote, who, along with Berke and local attorney Chantelle Roberson, judged the Mayor’s Youth Council members and their ideas such as holding voting festivals, mock votes and inviting candidate into local schools.
In Hamilton County, where voter turnout is historically low — only 29 percent of registered voters voted in the August election — it remains to be seen how many of the county’s 206,945 registered voters will have turned out by Tuesday and if young people will have shown up in higher numbers than in years past.