The FINANCIAL — A record-high percentage of U.S. voters say the outcome of this year’s election matters more to them than prior elections did. The 77% of registered voters holding this view is up six percentage points from 2016 and is the highest in Gallup’s trend dating back to 1996.
While few voters (2%) say the election matters less than in the past, 21% think it matters about the same.
These findings, from a Sept. 14-28 poll, mark the seventh consecutive presidential election in which Gallup has tracked this measure. The previous six readings were taken closer to the election date, but this should not be of consequence given that more voters than ever in U.S. history are voting early this year, either in person or by mail as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
Since 2004, at least seven in 10 voters have regarded each election as more consequential than those before it. However, far fewer voters considered the 1996 and 2000 elections as mattering more than the previous election, as 41% and 47%, respectively, said as much. This shift may have been a result of the 2000 election when the outcome of the election was ultimately decided by the U.S. Supreme Court after close vote totals in Florida necessitated a recount.
Partisans’ Views of Election Depend on Which Party Is in Power
While broad majorities across the political spectrum say this year’s election is more important, Democrats are slightly more likely than Republicans to say so — 85% vs. 79%. Independents (69%) are less likely to say this year’s election matters more, as is typically the case. Democrats’ current reading is the highest on record for the party and is up 16 points from 2016 — and it matches Republicans’ views in 2012 when President Barack Obama was up for reelection. Republicans’ views on the election are unchanged from 2016.
Partisans’ views of how much each election mattered have varied based on the sitting president’s party. That is, in every year that a Republican president was in the White House, Democrats were more likely than Republicans to say they thought the election mattered more than those prior. Likewise, each year the sitting president was a Democrat, Republicans were more likely to say the election mattered more.
Turnout Directly Linked to Voters’ Belief Election Matters More
Voter turnout has historically followed the same trajectory as the measure tracking how much the election matters. The more intently the electorate has viewed the election as mattering more than prior years, the higher voter turnout has been.
The correlation between Americans’ view that the election matters more and voter turnout has been 0.98 since 1996. This is on a scale from -1.0 to 1.0, where a score of 1.0 represents a perfect correlation — meaning the two figures move at the same rate in the same direction. A score of zero would indicate no correlation, while a score of -1.0 would represent a perfect negative correlation — meaning the figures move at the same rate in opposite directions.
In 2008, when voter turnout was at its highest point since 1968 and 61.6% of eligible voters went to the polls, 74% of voters had said the election outcome mattered more to them.
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