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More young U.S. voters head to Pennsylvania polls early in 2022

Washington, Nov 6 (Prensa Latina) Over 80,000 young voters in Pennsylvania are voting early this year compared to the 2018 midterm elections, according to an online tracker of early voting.

TargetEarly, a dashboard for the Democratic political data and data services firm TargetSmart, found that over 80,000 Pennsylvanians aged 18 to 29 have voted early so far in the state´s midterm elections. Only about 28,500 did so in 2018.

Midterm election years typically see significantly lower turnout than presidential election years, but several states across the country have seen record early voting turnout this year. Over 30 million early votes had already been cast nationwide as of Thursday, according to a comprehensive voting tracker.

TargetEarly’s numbers show young Democrats make up an even larger share of the early vote in Pennsylvania than they did in 2018 and 2020. Democrats are much more likely to vote early, while Republicans more commonly vote on Election Day.

Democrats make up more than 80% of voters aged 18 to 29 who have voted so far in Pennsylvania, while Republicans make up about 15% and unaffiliated voters make up about 5%.

Democrats only made up about 60% of that age group’s early vote in 2018 and 70% of it in 2020.

Major contests are happening in Pennsylvania over the race for governor and an open Senate seat. Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro (D) is running against state Sen. Doug Mastriano (R) for governor, while Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (D) faces Republican Mehmet Oz for the Senate seat being vacated by the retiring Sen. Pat Toomey (R).

Polls have shown Shapiro with comfortable leads over Mastriano, but Fetterman and Oz appear to be locked in a tight race, with polls showing neither candidate ahead by over a couple points.

Fetterman led throughout most of the general election campaign, but Oz has closed the gap in recent weeks.

The Senate race could determine which party will control the body after the midterms. Encouraging younger voters to turn out will be key to Democrats’ chances of winning in Pennsylvania and across the country.

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