Early Vote Totals Point Toward Record-Breaking Turnout for Midterm Elections [View all]
Midterm turnout reached a 40-year high in 2018 at 49% of the total voting-age population. Early voting totals suggest that number could be even higher in 2022.
An estimated 35.5 million Americans have already cast their votes in the 2022 midterms, and recent trends suggest turnout by Election Day could be even higher than in the past.
Contentious elections in Georgia have seen over 1.8 million votes around 400,000 more than at this time in 2018. During the primary season, many states also saw increased participation, including North Carolina (up 50%), Arizona (21%) and Maryland (19%), all hinting that constituents want their voices heard now more than ever.
Its a continuation of record-breaking turnout in recent years. The nonpartisan data center USAFacts reports that midterm turnout reached a 40-year high in 2018 at 49% of the total voting-age population, a dramatic uptick of over 10 percentage points from 2014. Two years later, the presidential elections experienced a 30-year turnout high, with 61.3% of Americans of eligible age making it to the polls.
In both the 2018 midterms and 2020 presidential elections, it was the age 18-24 demographic that made the largest jump in turnout. According to the USAFacts analysis, youth voter turnout increased by 10 percentage points from the 2016 to 2020 presidential elections, and, while midterm voter demographics tend to skew older, the youth vote nearly doubled in 2018, increasing from 15.9% to 30.1%. In Georgia, that same age group now makes up the highest share of registered voters in this years election, and the states data hub shows theyre also expected to be the most active.
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Our youth give me hope.