Older voters have a growing voice at the polls
Older voters have a growing voice at the polls"
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Complete 2024 turnout numbers won’t be known for a while — until after the U.S. Census Bureau conducts its postelection surveys. But those numbers from previous election cycles show the
impact of older voters. In the 2020 presidential election, 71.9 percent of Americans 65-plus said they voted, according to Census Bureau surveys. For those 45-64, it was 65.5 percent; for
those 25-44, 55 percent; and for those 18-24, 48 percent. That figure for voters 65-plus was the highest it’s been since the Census Bureau started tracking the numbers in 1964. The pattern
holds true in midterm elections as well: Voting by those 65-plus has been increasing and outpacing other age groups. Polls conducted in 2024 for AARP confirm that. Asked to rate themselves
on a scale of 1 to 10 on their motivation to vote in November, 91 percent of older voters in Ohio gave themselves a 10; the numbers steadily dropped for younger age groups — to 69 percent
for the youngest one. The pattern held in other states. At the same time the older voter turnout percentage has increased, the number of people in that demographic has expanded. More people
voting at higher rates means the size — and relative strength — of the 65-plus voting bloc is much bigger than it was. A TALE OF TWO STATES None of this surprises Steve Simon, the Democratic
secretary of state in Minnesota, or David Scanlan, the Republican one in New Hampshire. Older voters in their states vote in higher percentages than peers in any other state, at least based
on pre-2024 elections. The states have very different voting systems. The Cost of Voting Index, which tracks the availability of voting options such as no-excuse absentee ballots and
expanded in-person voting hours, puts Minnesota in the top third and New Hampshire near the bottom. Both officials point to strong civic culture as vital to keeping turnout high. With its
first-in-the-nation presidential primaries and midnight voting in some communities, New Hampshire has a history that prizes participation. “People know when the Election Day is, and they get
charged up for it,” Scanlan says. Scanlan notes that many of the nation’s oldest voters today came of age during the 1960s, when political activism — and turnout — rose. McDonald, the
Florida professor, says that if you vote once, you’re much more likely to vote again — both your sense of civic duty and your partisanship kick in. And campaigns are much more likely to
pester you to get to the ballot box at the next — and every — election. AARP won’t suggest how you vote — but strongly encourages you to do so. The reason is simple: That big bloc of older
voters that plays a disproportionate share in deciding elections has a lot riding on the actions of who wins. It’s not just Social Security and Medicare but also prescription drug prices,
family caregiving costs, long-term care — all topics that are “front and center for older voters,” says Khelan Bhatia, AARP voter engagement director. “It’s very real for them.”
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