Springfield News-Sun

If young voters sit out 2022, Dems will be in world of hurt

- E.J. Dionne Jr. E.J. Dionne Jr. writes for The Washington Post.

President Biden and the Democrats would do well to spend a lot of time over the coming weeks talking with young Americans.

It’s a matter of survival. If younger voters remain as turned off as they are now, Democrats will get clobbered in November.

Generation­al difference­s don’t always play a major role in politics, but they do now. Democrats are unusually dependent on support among the young, and if youth turnout in 2022 regresses to levels closer to those in the 2014 midterms, a lot of Democratic incumbents will be looking for new jobs.

The facts are plain. In five key swing states in 2020, Biden needed young voters to prevail . ... Biden won voters under 30 years old by 31 points in Arizona, 27 points in Pennsylvan­ia, 24 points in Michigan, 23 points in Wisconsin and 13 points in Georgia.

According to Census Bureau figures, only 19.9% of voters 18- to 29-years old cast ballots in the 2014 midterms, which produced a GOP sweep. But, inspired in part by the anti-trump movement, under-30 turnout soared to 35.6% in 2018, helping Democrats win control of the House. Turnout was also up substantia­lly among 30- to-44-year-olds.

The problem for Democrats now is that Biden’s numbers among young people are down, and so is enthusiasm for voting. Sean Mcelwee, executive director of Data for Progress, noted ... there’s been “a slow but steady erosion” in the president’s standing.

Young voters are affected by some of the same issues as older voters, including inflation and the persistenc­e of COVID-19, But among the Democratic-leaning young, there is a particular sense of disappoint­ment. “Despite Democratic accomplish­ments and the Republican­s building barriers to additional achievemen­ts,” Democratic pollster Molly Murphy told me, “younger voters feel they’re not getting much from Democrats that’s changing their lives.”

Murphy also noted that while young Americans are far closer to the Democrats on issues, they do not have the same sense of party loyalty that older voters have, which makes mobilizati­on in purely partisan terms more difficult . ... And younger progressiv­es “have found other ways to express their activism” beyond electoral politics.

John Della Volpe, director of polling for Harvard’s Institute of Politics, said that in his research among young Americans on which elements of their identity motivated their voting choices, Republican­s tended to emphasize two: their religious faith and the party itself. Younger Democrats offered a far more diffuse list, including gender, race, ethnicity, ideology and sexual identity . ...

What can Democrats do? Getting more stuff done would be a start. Mcelwee’s priorities would be enacting a reconcilia­tion bill that included substantia­l investment­s in climate action, followed by student debt forgivenes­s at the $10,000 level Biden is leaning toward. Della Volpe ... suggests that addressing the “lack of options young people have in owning a home” would have appeal among both college and non-college young voters.

But in the end, Murphy said, “the glaring reality of what is at stake” if the Republican­s win may prove to be the Democrats’ strongest card, especially if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade . ...

No doubt some older Democratic officehold­ers will wax impatient with the impatience of the young. After all, Biden and his party have had to deal with a wall of Republican obstructio­n . ...

But with their party facing a potential catastroph­e this fall, Democrats don’t have the luxury of lecturing their younger supporters on the need for patience. They will either turn them out, or they’ll lose.

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