Cross posted from Future Majority.
The final numbers for the youth vote on Super Tuesday are in.
First, take a look at what turnout thus far tells us about the Democratic advantage among young voters. The data for 2000, 2004, and 2006 come from CNN exit polls. The data for 2008 is an projection of the Democratic advantage among young voters in November of 2008. The projection was determined by adding up the total number of young voters participating in the Democratic and Republican primaries thus far (Super Tuesday and previous contests all the way back to Iowa), and calculating the percent of the total number of voters that participated in the Democratic and Republican contests respectively.
As you can see, the Democratic advantage among young voters is huge and growing.
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This chart from CIRCLE's National Super Tuesday Fact Sheet (pdf) shows the actual turnout numbers in the Democratic and Republican Super Tuesday contests. It's a state-by-state representation of some of the data in the previous graph:
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This next chart shows total youth turnout (Dem + Rep) in Super Tuesday states, compares turnout from 2000 to 2008, and notes the youth share of the electorate. Big take-away: youth turnout rate was up in every state for which comparative data exists.
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Finally, a quick refresher on which candidate won the youth vote in each state on both the Republican and Democratic side. I've already discussed these results on the Democratic side.
On the Republican side, I thought it was interesting that Huckabee won the youth vote in more states than any other candidate, and he may even have won a larger share of the youth vote in raw numbers than either McCain or Romney. No offense to Ron Paul supporters, but more and more Huckabee looks like the youth candidate on the Republican side.
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