Pew Report: High Voter Turnout Boosted GOP in 2022 Midterms.
Republican gains in the 2022 midterms were largely owed to an advantage the party achieved in voter turnout, according to an analysis by the Pew Research Center.
The report, published on July 12, found that “partisan differences in turnout—rather than vote switching between parties—account for most of the Republican gains in voting for the House last year.”
Pew also found that “68 percent of those who voted in the 2020 presidential election turned out to vote in the 2022 midterms,” and that “Former President Donald Trump’s voters turned out at a higher rate in 2022 (71 percent) than did President Joe Biden’s voters (67 percent).”
The poll showed that very few voters across the elections analyzed switched party support; although “Democratic 2018 voters were slightly more likely than Republican 2018 voters to defect in 2022, with the net consequences of the party balance flipping 1 or 2 percentage points to the GOP.”
While the “red wave” failed to materialize for the GOP last year, the party was still able to win control of the House and win the nationwide popular vote in House races.
Voter Demographics
More voters, in both parties, voted in person on election day 2022 than they did in 2020, according to Pew. Yet, here, Republicans held a big advantage over Democrats, 51 percent to 34 percent.
Another statistic contained in the Pew poll is that voters who were 50 or older constituted, in 2022, a larger segment (64 percent) of the total number of voters than in the three elections prior. What may be another positive portent for the GOP is that among those 50-plus voters, 70 percent were Republican and 57 percent Democratic.
“White voters without college degrees made up a majority (54 percent) of Republican voters in 2022, compared with 27% of Democratic voters,” Pew found. “Yet these voters made up a somewhat greater share of GOP voters in 2020 (58 percent) and 2018 (57 percent).”
White evangelical Protestants continue to be a large and solid segment of support for Republicans, with the advantage actually bigger in 2022 than in the previous three elections. Pew reported: “86 percent supported Republican candidates in 2022 and 12 percent voted Democratic.”
A heartening trend for the GOP, one documented in the Pew poll, is that even though most Hispanics still vote Democratic, Republicans are cutting into the advantage Democrats hold with this key demographic.
“Hispanic voters favored Demo
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