National exit polls of more than 17,000 voters show a remarkable trend: adults age 18–29 voted against the Republican Tsunami by sixteen points (56–40). Younger adults age 18–24 were even more progressive, voting against Republicans by nineteen points (58-39).
Billy WimsattThis article originally appeared on The Huffington Post. National exit polls of more than 17,000 voters show a remarkable trend: adults age 18–29 voted against the Republican Tsunami by sixteen points (56–40). Younger adults age 18–24 were even more progressive, voting against Republicans by nineteen points (58-39). The exit polls, conducted by Edison Research in association with AP and CNN found that:
* 18-to-29-year-olds voted for Democrats over Republicans by sixteen points (56–40)
* 18-to-24-year-olds voted for Democrats over Republicans by nineteen points (58–39)
These are remarkable numbers for a couple of reasons. First, the sample size of the poll was 17,506 respondents, chosen based on scientifically randomized methodology, so the numbers are likely to be fairly robust.
Second, young adult voters withstood a Republican "tsunami" election and voted roughly nineteen to thirty-seven points more progressively than older age demographics, against the backdrop of a highly-polarized Republican-leaning political environment.
These numbers are in keeping with a trend from the previous three national elections in which young adult voters (18–29) preferred Democrats to Republicans at a much higher rate than older segments of the population—by nine points in 2004, twenty-two points in 2006 and thirty-four points in 2006.
The silver lining in yesterday’s results for Democrats is that for four national elections in a row, young voters continue to be the most progressive segment of the population—and the most progressive generation on record since exit polling began in 1972.
If this trend continues, the opportunity for progressive values and leadership to shape America’s future is enormous. But progressive investment in youth organizing and youth leadership has been spotty at best. The question now is whether progressive leaders and funders will draw the right lessons from 2010, seize the opportunity, and finally get serious about investing in the rising progressive electorate.
Shout outs to the Bus Federation which has highly-creative and effective nonpartisan youth GOTV operations in three of the states with the tightest uncalled races right now. If Democrats win any of the three squeaky-close races in Colorado, Washington and Oregon, they will at least partially have the Bus Federation and other youth and student organizations to thank.
Young people are ours to lose—for now.
The writing is on the wall. But can we read it?
Editor’s Note: For more reports about the youth vote coming soon, visit StudentNation.
Billy WimsattSocial entrepreneur, philanthropic consultant, author, journalist, and political organizer, Billy Wimsatt's latest book is Please Don’t Bomb the Suburbs: A Midterm Report on My Generation, and the Future of our Super Movement (Akashic Books, September 2010).