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22 Nov 2009

Expert predicts possible shift in senior voting bloc

- 3 Nov 2009
By The Gerontological Society of America   
Page 1 of 2

The majority of people aged 65 and over cast ballots for John McCain in 2008, but older voters will not necessarily favor Republicans in future presidential elections, according to an article in the latest issue of The Gerontologist (Vol. 49, No. 5).

Author Robert Binstock, PhD, a renowned authority on seniors' voting patterns, analyzed data from the 2008 national Election Day exit poll conducted by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International, which was financed by major television networks, newspapers, and magazines.

Older people were in fact the only age group to give a majority to McCain. It was just the second time in the last 10 presidential elections, the article points out, that this population segment failed to choose the winner.

"Factors other than old-age policy issues — in particular, the partisan leanings of current older voters, the candidates' contrasting ages, and the candidates' contrasting racial identities — shed some light on why McCain received distinctive majorities from various cohorts of older voters," Binstock said.

The polling numbers show that 54 percent of voters aged 65 to 74 endorsed McCain in 2008. Binstock noted that those in this demographic were socialized to politics as youngsters during Republican Dwight Eisenhower's presidency.

"The partisan leaning of the birth cohort that is now aged in its late 60s is definitely a factor in explaining the preference of a majority of current older voters for Republican presidential candidates," he wrote.

However, baby boomers now reaching the old age category may have different political preferences. For example, in the recent election, those aged 60 to 64 — people who entered their formative teen years while Democrat John F. Kennedy was in the White House — gave more votes to Barack Obama than to McCain.

 
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