Monterey Herald

Young voters' enthusiasm for Democrats waned during midterms

- By Will Weissert and Hannah Fingerhut

Young voters who have been critical to Democratic successes in recent elections showed signs in November's midterms that their enthusiasm may be waning, a potential warning sign for a party that will need their strong backing heading into the 2024 presidenti­al race.

Voters under 30 went 53% for Democratic House candidates compared with only 41% for Republican candidates nationwide, according to AP VoteCast, a sweeping national survey of the electorate. But that level of support for Democrats was down compared with 2020, when such voters supported President Joe Biden over his predecesso­r, Donald Trump, 61% to 36%. And in 2018, when Democrats used a midterm surge to retake control of the House, voters 18 to 29 went 64% for the party compared with 34% for the GOP.

Biden's party nonetheles­s exceeded midterm expectatio­ns, holding the Senate and surrenderi­ng only a small Republican House majority. The president himself hailed young voter turnout as “historic.” Still, the trend line for younger voters may be an early indicator of the Democrats' challenge to maintain the coalition of Black people, women, college-educated voters, city dwellers and suburbanit­es that has buoyed the party in the years since Trump won the White House.

Weakness in any part of that voting bloc could have implicatio­ns during the next presidenti­al race. Biden, who will be a few weeks shy of his 82nd birthday on Election Day 2024, says he intends to run again. Trump, 76, has already announced his candidacy.

“There might have been retrenchme­nt in youth voters,” said Michael McDonald, a political science professor at the University of Florida and an expert on voting and data.

McDonald cautioned against reading too much into what could be an anomaly. But he said the shift may have been fueled by issues like high inflation, which has hit young people especially hard since their wages are less likely to increase fast enough to keep pace with rising prices.

“Youngest people also have the weakest partisan attachment­s, so they can be more susceptibl­e to partisan swings nationally,” McDonald said. “There's no reason why Republican­s can't rebound among younger people.”

Indeed, VoteCast shows only about a quarter of Democrats under 30 say being a Democrat is “extremely” or “very” important to them, compared with roughly a third of older Democrats.

The data showed that voters under 30 did not support Democrats decisively enough to sway key races nationally, but the news wasn't all bad for the party. Midterm voters under 45 — an age bracket that includes Generation Z and millennial­s — backed Biden's party at rates that exceeded his 2020 support in races for governor of Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Kansas, as well as the race for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia.

Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman beat Republican celebrity heart surgeon Dr. Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvan­ia's Senate contest while getting 62% of the vote of those 18 to 44. That was slightly better than Biden's 56% with such voters in 2020. In the Pennsylvan­ia governor's race, Democrat Josh Shapiro also won while outpacing Biden's support in 2020, earning 64% of that age group.

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly won a second term by modestly outperform­ing 2020 margins with voters under 45 in the red state, 52% to Biden's 45%. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also commanding­ly secured reelection while garnering a somewhat larger percentage of the state's voters under 45 in 2022, 61%, than Biden did in 2020, 54%.

 ?? JOSEPH CRESS — IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN VIA AP, FILE ?? People line up to vote on Election Day, Nov. 8 at Petersen Residence Hall on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City, Iowa.
JOSEPH CRESS — IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN VIA AP, FILE People line up to vote on Election Day, Nov. 8 at Petersen Residence Hall on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City, Iowa.

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