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Young voters are just young normies

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Plus: Presidential debates, DIY poop transplants, and more. May 16, 2024 Good morning! Today, senior

Plus: Presidential debates, DIY poop transplants, and more. May 16, 2024 [View in browser]( Good morning! Today, senior reporter and young person Christian Paz is here with some exclusive polling to explain what young voters care about. —Caroline Houck, senior editor of news   [vote sign with people walking past.] Elijah Nouvelage/AFP What young voters actually care about Long before the [Israel-Hamas war]( broke out, young Americans [were already souring on President Joe Biden](. That discontent has only [picked up in the last few months]( — registering in polls as increased support for [Donald Trump]( and third-party candidates, and defections from the president, but [not necessarily]( from his party. The reasons for why this is happening have become one of the defining questions of the [2024 election]( so far. But what if this horse race is missing the point? A new poll of young voters shared exclusively with Vox provides an important corrective: Young voters aren’t all that mystical; they’re a lot like the average American, concerned first and foremost with the state of the [economy](. “People tend to have a skewed perception of what young voters prioritize,” Evan Roth Smith, the lead pollster for the Democratic-aligned public opinion research group Blueprint, which conducted this polling, told me. “A large part of that is because there are ways politically that young voters are very different and very distinct in what they care about. But the places that they’re different shouldn’t be confused with the places that they care the most about.” This tracks with what my election reporting has turned up this year: Economic and affordability issues are far and away the top concern for all young voters in Blueprint’s latest poll. Progressive priorities, like [climate change](, [student loans](, and even the [Israel-Palestine conflict](, rank far below kitchen table issues. Notably, the poll does not ask about a match-up between Biden and Trump, or about 2024 vote preferences. So what does this poll tell us? A lot. Here are the top four takeaways. It’s the economy — and health care Blueprint surveyed 943 registered voters between the ages of 18 and 30, recruited from an online panel from April 27 to April 29. The margin of error is 5.8 percentage points. Those participants were asked how important a variety of issues were to them, and were able to choose multiple priorities. Across every kind of young voter asked — Democratic, independent, or Republican; Black or Latino or white; college-educated or not — some variation of an economic concern was a top electoral issue. As a whole, inflation and the economy were the most frequently prioritized issues, chosen by 73 percent and 70 percent of young voters, respectively. Health care was the only rival issue — cited frequently by Democrats, Black and white voters, women, and those making more than $75,000 a year — and chosen 71 percent of the time by all young voters as a top priority. [A chart showing the share of all young voters, young Democrats, young independents, and young Republicans who prioritize more jobs, higher wagers, lower interest rates, and lower prices.] The top priority for young voters is also the one where they trust Biden least When young people talk about the economy, they overwhelmingly mean lowering prices on food, gas, and services — not creating more jobs, lowering interest rates, or even earning higher wages (though that’s the second most important thing). That dynamic is nearly the inverse of the way the president has been talking about his economic record and about his plans for a second term. For most of his presidency and the campaign so far, he’s primarily talked about wage growth, cutting junk fees, and the historically low unemployment rate. And young voters see this: there’s a 37-point gap between how much they want Biden to prioritize lowering prices, and how much they think he is. Trump, meanwhile, is seen as focusing on prices. And this is the crucial conclusion: Trump is trusted more than Biden on the single most important issue: 52 percent say they trust Trump over Biden to reduce prices. “Young voters trust [Joe Biden]( more than Donald Trump on just about everything — except lowering prices. That’s a real problem,” Roth Smith told me. [A chart showing the share of all young voters, young Democrats, young independents, and young Republicans who prioritize more jobs, higher wagers, lower interest rates, and lower prices.] The issues we associate with young voters aren’t very salient When talking about young voters today, it seems like most politicians and the journalists covering the nation seem to default to a handful of progressive priorities: climate change, student loan cancellation, identity politics, and the war in [Gaza](. But at least according to this poll, those don’t tend to be the issues that young voters are prioritizing the most. Among the lowest-priority issues in this survey are [LGBTQ]( issues and student loans (both chosen 38 percent of the time), while climate change, [Israel]( and [Palestine](, democracy, and race relations were chosen just about half the time. And they don’t necessarily want Biden to make a major change on some of these topics. A good chunk of young voters actually say that Biden is closer to their views on student loans (43 percent say this), and about 42 percent of independent voters say Biden is close to their views on [abortion](, student loans, and immigration and the border. Which leads us to ... Young voters are idiosyncratic; they aren’t the progressive saviors some people want them to be As [I’ve written before](, the youth aren’t necessarily going to save us. “At a moment when people are sitting at home, watching campus protests or climate protests, and go ‘Wow, this new generation has totally different priorities,’ really, when you start to survey everyone, you find out that the kids are just like us,” Roth Smith said. They are almost an even ideological mix of moderate, liberal, and conservative — something [many]( [other]( [surveys]( have found — but many still think Trump is not moderate enough. For example, while about half of young voters see Biden as liberal, 74 percent say that Trump is conservative. They are more divided over how much more liberal or more conservative Biden should become; 37 percent would prefer he move to the left, 31 percent would prefer he move to the right, and 32 percent prefer he stay where he is. “The difference for Trump is just about everyone who wants him to move wants him to move left,” Roth Smith said. While 39 percent want him to stay where he is, 45 percent want him to be less conservative. It’s possible to draw out one more conclusion from this state of play: though young voters are upset, these conditions and feelings about Trump don’t seem to point toward a massive shift of young Americans toward Trump. All this suggests there are plenty of opportunities for Biden to shore up his support, for his campaign to improve its messaging and targeting of voters, and for direct attacks on Trump that go beyond “[Dobbs and Democracy](.” But it would be a mistake to assume that young voters are drastically different creatures. We’re essentially normies. We’re just young. —[Christian Paz, senior reporter](   [Listen]( Florida man’s unhushed money The hush money trial has exposed the ecosystem that once protected former president Donald Trump. Here's what it's like inside the courtroom. [Listen now](   SCIENCE - Did you get a photo of the aurora borealis?: I didn’t, but I did enjoy this article about why we’ve been seeing the northern lights so often lately. [[Vox](] - DIY poop transplants gone right and wrong simultaneously: What one woman’s journey — which includes lessened IBS but increased acne — can teach us. [[Insider](] - Another strange and understudied prospect of psychedelics: “A world without severe chronic pain.” [[Vox](] [northern lights] Yang Dong/VCG via Getty Images ALSO IN THE NEWS - “A long-festering split at the heart of Israel’s war cabinet has burst into the open”: On Wednesday, Israel’s defense minister “call[ed] on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make a decision” about the post-war plan for Gaza. [[Guardian](] - Buckle up: The presidential debates are ... back on? [[Vox](] - What do you want for dinner tonight?: “Chain restaurants have always been a big part of American life, but lately chains are everywhere.” A look at what happens “when everything, including our appetites, [is] built to scale.” [[Eater](]   Panic! At The Drugstore The panic about the crime rate really is just a panic. [Listen now](   Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story you’re curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today's edition was produced and edited by Caroline Houck. We'll see you tomorrow!   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Vox’s unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

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