Voter Turnout Presidential Elections Over Time
The historical trends in voter turnout in the united states presidential elections have been determined by the gradual expansion of voting rights from the initial restriction to white male property owners aged 21 or older in the early years of the country s independence to all citizens aged 18 or older in the mid 20th century.
Voter turnout presidential elections over time. Numbers then dipped for several years until the 1960 election between nixon and kennedy mentioned above. Voter turnout in u s. Most modern presidential elections in the united states have a voter turnout rate of between 50 and 60 percent.
But america had a much smaller voting pool over a century ago. But in the 2016 presidential election nearly 56 of the u s. Presidential elections since 1908.
Electoral competition should drive up turnout. Voting age population cast a ballot. That represented a slight uptick from 2012 but was lower than in the record year of 2008 when turnout topped 58 of the voting age population.
Bloomberg s model anticipates the total number of. Ease of registration should affect turnout. Expected total number of votes are based on outcomes from bloomberg news historic high turnout model and have a margin of error of 5.
Leading into some elections near real time early voting statistics mail ballots or in person are collected for states or localities where available. Voter turnout stayed relatively high in the 1904 and 1908 elections around 65 percent. In comparing two jurisdictions over time with comparable demographic caracteristics education age income etc turnout should be higher in the one with less restrictive registration requirements.
Voter turnout in united states presidential elections has historically been higher than the turnout for midterm elections. Selected voter turnout rates by demographic groups from the census bureau s current population survey corrected for vote over report and non response bias. This statistic presents the voter turnout in the u s.