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Youth support collapse hits Democrats in 2024

In US Politics News by Newsroom October 7, 2025

Youth support collapse hits Democrats in 2024

Credit: Independent

Summary

  • Youth support for Democrats collapsed in the 2024 election.
  • The party lost trust due to economic and inflation concerns.
  • Biden’s age and perceived dishonesty hurt youth appeal.

Last year, as Donald Trump finished his political comeback, a number of wedge issues tore the Democratic base apart: independents lost faith in the economy, which remained stable but was burdened by ongoing inflation and rising housing costs that were pushing more Americans into housing insecurity than ever before.

A sense of dishonesty was fueled by Joe Biden's age-related problems and the idea that his close friends and staffers were covering it up. Many were appalled by Israel's U.S.-backed military operation in Gaza, particularly on college campuses, which were the sites of protests and the targets of accusations from pro-Israel organizations.

As they lose faith in national elected leaders, many young Americans who are yearning for meaningful change in their communities are turning to local elections, according to survey data released by Project 26 Pennsylvania on Monday. They are also looking for ways to bring about real, effective political change at the national level that yields measurable outcomes.

To put it briefly, the solution to the disenchantment of young Democratic voters is to present optimistic aspirations and then work to bring them to fruition.

“This isn't a story of apathy, it's a story of credibility and outcomes,”

Connie Miller, Project 26 Pennsylvania’s founder, said.

“We don't have to over complicate it: Gen Z students are deeply concerned about issues like economic security, democracy and rights rollbacks.
They're not looking for entertainment or empty slogans. They want proof their engagement delivers real results,”

Miller said.

In the survey responses taken from 2,800 conversations with college-aged voters across the state, an overwhelming majority (75.09 percent) of those younger Americans said they didn’t believe elected political leaders make decisions “for the best interest of young people.” Just 2 percent said they believed that, in general, elected officials had young people’s best interests in mind.

Just 22% of younger voters indicated that their main source of optimism for the future is technological innovation, while 7 out of 10 younger voters told the group that they are more interested in "local communities and peer support networks" than in national political institutions (54.3 percent).

The data also hinted at the reason why younger Americans are turning to local sources for positive change: they don't think their own political involvement makes a significant difference. This belief follows younger Democrats' mostly unsuccessful pressure on the Biden White House to soften its unwavering support for Israel during much of 2024.

Of the shutdown fight, Miller added:

“Whatever the shutdown strategy is, Gen-Z is eager to see Democrats go on the offensive to fix bad governance and stand up for their cost of living.”
“I think there can be a little bit of talking past with Gen Z,”

Miller said.

“We have core assumptions about what are the most important things to talk to Gen Z about, you know: it's climate change, it's abortion.”
“And those are important to them, but they're telling us, you know, the thing that would fix my life tomorrow would be if things were less expensive, would be if I wasn't afraid that, you know, my internship would be gone this summer if I wasn't worried about having fewer civil rights than my grandparents had.”

How did young men and young women differ in their voting shifts?

Young men made a considerable rightward shift as evidenced by Trump receiving around 56% of the young male vote, compared to 41% in 2020 elections. Young men also saw a decline in party identification as Democrats went from 42% to 32% and Republicans increased from 20% to 29% between 2020 and 2024. 

This pattern played a significant role in eroding youth support for the Democratic Party. Yonce the elections, young women continued to support Democrats, but at a narrower margin. About 61% of young women voted for the Harris/Walz ticket, while 48% of young men voted the same. 

Contrary to young men, young women did not demonstrate large shifts in party identification. In fact, young women even saw Democratic leaning support stay about the same or, possibly even increase, providing a more stabilized blue count as opposed to men.