Democratic control of Congress preferred 69%-28%, majority of young Democrats definitely voting [View all]
Source: Harvard Institute of Politics
A new national poll of Americas 18- to 29-year-olds by Harvards Institute of Politics (IOP), located at the Kennedy School of Government, finds a marked increase in the number of young Americans who indicate that they will definitely be voting in the upcoming midterm Congressional elections. Overall, 37 percent of Americans under 30 indicates that they will definitely be voting, compared to 23 percent who said the same in 2014, and 31 percent in 2010, the year of the last wave election.
Young Democrats are driving nearly all of the increase in enthusiasm; a majority (51%) report that they will definitely vote in November, which represents a 9-percentage point increase since November 2017 and is significantly larger than the 36 percent of Republicans who say the same. At this point in the 2014 election cycle, 28 percent of Democrats and 31 percent of Republicans indicated that they would definitely be voting. In the Spring of 2010, 35 percent of Democrats and 41 percent of Republicans held a similar interest in voting.
Preference for Democratic control of Congress has grown between now and the time of the last IOP poll. In Fall 2017, there was a 32-point partisan gap among the most likely young voters, 65 percent preferring Democrats control Congress, with 33 percent favoring Republicans.
Read more: http://iop.harvard.edu/spring-2018-poll