The Volokh Conspiracy
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More Evidence that Republicans are Now the Party that Benefits From High Voter Turnout
If the trend persists, it may lead to reconsideration of traditional partisan attitudes towards mandatory voting and other policies intended to increase turnout.

I have previously written about evidence indicating that, in the Trump era, Republicans are now the party that stands to benefit from relatively high voter turnout. A new New York Times/Siena study provides further confirmation:
In a reversal of one of the most familiar patterns in American politics, it appears that Donald J. Trump, not President Biden, would stand to gain if everyone in the country turned out and voted.
In New York Times/Siena College polls over the last year, Mr. Biden holds a wide lead over Mr. Trump among regular primary and midterm voters, yet he trails among the rest of the electorate, giving Mr. Trump a lead among registered voters overall….
The NYT/Siena study finds that people who voted in 2022 midterm primary elections favored Biden over Trump by a 49% to 44% margin, those who voted in 2022 general elections, but not primaries favored Biden by a slight 46-45 margin, those who voted in the 2020 election, but not midterms favored Trump 44-42; finally those who never voted before supported Trump by a large 49-35 margin.
As noted in my earlier post, the standard explanation for this shift is that the Trump-era GOP is strongest among lesser-educated voters, and they - in turn - are less likely to turn out. There is now a large "diploma gap" between Democratic and Republican voters.
The NYT analysis adds the point that high-turnout voters tend to be more supportive of abortion rights and more concerned about democracy-preservation. These are relatively strong issues for Biden. By contrast, low-frequency voters are more focused on short-term economic trends. This year, short-term economic issues are helping Trump, in part because of widespread voter ignorance about the true state of the economy and the causes of inflation (such ignorance tends to be more common among less-educated and less-engaged voters).
If the trend towards Republicans doing better among low-propensity voters continues, perhaps this will lead partisans to reconsider their traditional attitudes towards various policies intended to increase turnout, including mandatory voting. I discussed this possibility in my earlier post:
Traditionally, Democrats and progressives have been sympathetic to policies intended to increase voter turnout, while conservative Republicans have been highly skeptical. Advocates of the most extreme such policy—mandatory voting—have also mostly been on the left…..
Both sides in this debate cite high-minded, nonpartisan rationales for their positions…. But cynics have long wondered whether the real motive was partisan gain: perhaps liberal Democrats supported efforts to increase turnout because it would help them win, while conservative Republicans opposed them for the very same reason….
Recent polling trends may put both cynical and idealistic explanations for these views to the test. In the Trump era, it is increasingly Republican candidates—especially Trump himself—who stand to benefit from higher turnout.
For those interested, I have long been an opponent of mandatory voting, and a skeptic the supposed virtues of higher turnout. I held that view back when increasing turnout was expected to benefit Democrats, and still hold it today, when high turnout seems to advantage the GOP. I summarized the reasons why in my previous post:
I think most people do not have a duty to vote, even in high-stakes elections. And I have argued that relatively ignorant citizens can often do more good by abstaining from voting than by casting poorly informed votes (though I am also skeptical of arguments that government should try to weed out ignorant voters, primarily because I doubt that it can be trusted to do so in an unbiased way)…..
It isn't just that a more ignorant electorate is likely to make worse choices among the options before them. It is that those options are likely to be worse to begin with. Parties facing a relatively ignorant election are likely to select lower-quality candidates and policies than those facing a more knowledgeable one. I describe the logic behind this more fully in my book Democracy and Political Ignorance.
This connection between voter knowledge and relatively good policy outcomes is not an iron law. In Chapter 2 of my book, I go over some scenarios where voter ignorance can actually be beneficial. But I also explain why such situations are likely to be unusual.
It's possible that the Trump-era trend towards Republicans benefiting from higher turnout will prove to be an aberration. But if it continues and solidifies, I wonder if the partisans will gradually reverse positions on turnout issues. If it happens, it wouldn't be the first time that partisan advantage prevailed over consistent adherence to principle.
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Does not pass the giggle test. Throughout the nation right-wingers are avid to suppress voting. It may be they have confidence in their myriad suppression methods—that they think a remnant will favor them if they have not been barred by status, gerrymandered, purged from registration rolls, or died of heat stroke in endless lines at thinly distributed polling places. But no one on the right shows any interest in actually enlarging turnout.
Your comment makes no sense. People act based on their perception of the facts, not on the actual facts. It very well is plausible that people on the right are relying on outdated conventional wisdom.
Moreover — as noted in other threads — Trump this year is encouraging his voters to do mail in voting.
Republican voters often vote against their interests, so why shouldn't that extend to Republican vote suppressors?
I hate these condescending articles blaming "voter ignorance" for those who are suffering due to Bidenomics.
Findings published by the National True Cost of Living Coalition from two months ago showed: "The typical U.S. household needed to pay $227 more a month in March to purchase the same goods and services it did one year ago because of still-high inflation. Americans are paying on average $784 more each month compared with the same time two years ago and $1,069 more compared with three years ago."
Those who hang out in the faculty lounge do not notice those increases because their faculty contract shows a salary increase for the upcoming year just as it did for last year and the year before. They also probably received a $10,000 "summer stipend" for hanging out at their lake house and updating their textbook this summer.
For the rest of us, our income has not kept up with inflation and no summer stipend will be deposited in our banks come July 1st. No. It's not voter ignorance that is causing the working class voters to move to Trump and have more interest in voting this fall. It is the fact that Biden's policies have been a disaster for our finances and we know that four more years of Democrats in charge will push many more consumers into bankruptcy and/or homelessness.
And don't tell me Wendy's has introduced a $3 breakfast deal so that shows the economy is doing great and American's can afford an inexpensive breakfast. I don't eat that crappy fast-food high carb/high sugar crap and would prefer to be able to afford the fresh fruit and real yogurt for breakfast. I want to be able to afford those meals I enjoyed four years ago when we had a financially literate (and dementia-free) President in charge.
FJB! and his Bidenomics as well!
Yes, they have. Indeed, the lower percentile one is, the better one's wages have done relative to inflation. So, yes, people who think otherwise are indeed ignorant.
The thing is, though, is that this is really a complete myth; people are responding to polls by saying, "My personal economic situation is good, but I think the economy is bad." It's not that they are suffering and therefore reject the economic data showing the economy is doing well. They're doing well — and know it — and yet still reject the economic data showing the economy is doing well.
Then perhaps you shouldn't support the party that wants to drastically drive up the labor costs for growing/picking said fruit.
Americans are doing well in comparison to other large countries. They're not doing well compared to the period immediately pre-Covid. My income, for example, has not kept up with inflation. My wife's is worse than mine. We're among the "not hanging out in the faculty lounge" rest-of-us.
And the economic data says we're not doing well as a country, either: https://www.bea.gov/news/glance
Personal outlays are rising faster than disposable income. We owe more to foreigners (international investment) but foreign direct investment is going down. The international trade deficit is still going up. Employment numbers are only going up if you count number of jobs, while they're going down if you count number of workers (more people have to work multiple jobs to make ends meet), and unemployment is creeping up because the number of new jobs is less than the number of people entering the workforce.
Personal outlays are rising faster than disposable income
That does not mean the economy is bad, unless you assume outlays are purely nondiscretionary.
Sum total trade deficit? For fuck's sake when have we worried about that?
You are cherry picking and you're not doing a very good job of hiding it.
Meanwhile, in numbers that matter regarding prosperity post-Covid:
"In 2023, the median American worker can afford the same goods and services as they did in 2019, plus an additional $1,000 to spend or save—because median earnings rose faster than prices."
https://home.treasury.gov/news/featured-stories/the-purchasing-power-of-american-households
The reason people think the economy is doing bad even though it's fine for them is because of partisans like you lying with statistics. You do a shitty job, but throw enough smoke to make it play.
Congrats on talking down America to help your side.
"Yes, they have"
Actual facts.
Real Median Household Income. US
2019: $78,250
2020: $76,660
2021: $76,330
2022: $74,580
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MEHOINUSA672N
That's not "keeping up with inflation". That's a real median drop of almost $4,000
Hey, Armchair: my iPhone is broken, so maybe you can help me: what year is it now?
I know you have trouble recognizing "links" and all based on your history, but if you look AT THE LINK, I provide the data available up to the last available year.
Surprisingly enough, it takes time for information about past years to be officially written down.
But don't let those FACTS get in the way of your blaise link-less assertions that of course incomes have kept up with inflation.
The rest of us go by things like facts. You...well...you don't need those.
It looks more like you go by cherry picking than facts, since information is available that contradicts your narrative. Take a look at Sarcastr0's link, for example; in 2023, US households were better off than they were four years ago. Household income has trended up for the past year and a half, and four years ago from today the Trump administration was mishandling the COVID pandemic.
No; you found a link that was out of date and provided the data from that link.
Seriously? It's FRED. Go ride your high horse up on out of here.
I notice you posted 0 links to back up your assertions. Please provide citations that "Indeed, the lower percentile one is, the better one’s wages have done relative to inflation. So, yes, people who think otherwise are indeed ignorant."
I don't care that it's FRED. I'm not accusing the data of being false. I'm accusing the data of being 2022. When the year is now 2024.
I am pretty sure that no politician has ever said, "When you go into the voting booth, ask yourself whether you were better off two years ago than you were five years ago."
Your iPhone must be broken. You couldn't be bothered to provide any evidence to back up your assertions.
What or how much fruit and yogurt are you eating that $3 won't cover a breakfast? Americans are obese enough that shifting down a column in the USDA's food costs would generally do them good.
I am sorry that your career choices left you behind in earning power. Or are you positing a widespread market failure?
"I am sorry that your career choices left you behind in earning power."
Don't dismiss the lack of legitimate education as a factor.
By "the rest of us," it appears this guy is referring to half-educated, socially inept, economically inadequate, reason-disdaining culture war rejects residing in desolate can't-keep-up backwaters.
I have long opposed mandatory voting on standard libertarian grounds, as well as on the practical grounds that it is unlikely to improve the outcome of elections to add the contributions of millions of low info, reluctant voters to the ballot boxes.
But one salubrious effect of mandatory voting would be to completely eviscerate the turnout fights. Not needing voter registration drives and GOTV efforts would be a minor positive, but entirely eliminating the make-registration-more-difficult and try-to-drive-down-voter-turnout efforts would be an unalloyed good. Those efforts provide absolutely no societal benefit — only potential partisan benefit.
I realize that implementing this is not as simple as it seems; for example, where do college students register? And there's a risk that a large bloc of apathy voters may treat the whole thing as a joke, largely voting for some incoherent clown game show host (oh, wait) merely because they're bored and don't care.
How exactly do you enforce mandatory voting? Arrest someone who stays home?
And what is a legitimate excuse for not voting? Suppose someone has a family emergency and can't make it? Or there is a disaster and the voter is a first responder? Or the voter is laid up in the hospital on Election Day?
How do you enforce any law? You punish people who break it. In Australia, which has mandatory voting, an eligible voter¹ who fails to vote w/o good cause is fined.
¹Pretty much all adult citizens, except inmates and the mentally incompetent.