FDU Poll: NJ Residents Under 30 more Progressive, but not more Democratic

 

 

 

 

For Immediate Release

Contact:                           

Dan Cassino 

Executive Director, FDU Poll    

973.896.7072/ dcassino@fdu.edu

NJ Residents Under 30 are more Progressive, but not more Democratic

Express skepticism about democracy, capitalism, political parties

Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, NJ, December 16, 2022 – Young New Jerseyans are likely to hold progressive views on issues like climate change and universal healthcare, but they are not appreciably more likely to be Democratic than older voters in the state. According to the latest results from the FDU Poll, those progressive views seem to be tempered by a general distrust of the political parties, and even of democracy as an institution. The poll also showed that non-white voters in New Jersey are not monolithically Democrats, potentially creating opportunities for Republicans going forward.

The online survey of 1,678 young adults ages 18 to 30 was designed to look at the views of young people in New Jersey, with separate samples of young men nationwide, and a smaller sample of young women nationwide included for comparison purposes.

“It’s not as simple as young voters being more Democratic,” said Dan Cassino, a professor of Government and Politics at FDU, and the Executive Director of the Poll. “We’re seeing that the past few years of American life have shaped their political and social views into something entirely new and different.”

Overall, young people in New Jersey are not significantly more Democratic than voters overall in the state. In FDU’s 2022 pre-election poll, 50 percent of New Jersey voters identified as Democrats (or leaning towards the Democratic party), compared with 52 percent of residents ages 18 to 30. They are, however, less likely to identify as Republicans: 25 percent of young residents do so, compared with 33 percent of 2022 voters. Just as with other Garden Staters, young women are much more likely to be Democrats than young men (61 percent versus 46 percent), and less likely to be Republicans (20 percent versus 29 percent). Put another way, young men in New Jersey are 17 points more likely to be Democrats than Republicans; young women are 41 points more likely.

Former President Trump is particularly unpopular among young New Jerseyans: just 19 percent say that they voted for him in 2020, compared 48 percent who say that they voted for Biden. Even twenty-two percent of young Republicans in the state say that they supported Biden over Trump in that election.

There are some warning signs for Democrats, though. They have only a narrow edge among whites ages 18 to 30 (43 percent Democratic, 37 percent Republican), and their support among other racial and ethnic groups is far from monolithic. Sixty-three percent of African-American young people identify as Democrats, but that figure is just 56 percent among Asian-Americans and 53 percent among Hispanics.

“We’ve seen challenges for Democrats nationwide among non-white groups,” said Cassino. “Democrats cannot afford to take non-white voters, especially non-white men, for granted in elections.”

Young New Jersey residents are also not much different from other residents on abortion. Forty-nine percent of 18-30 year old residents say that they think abortion should “be legal under any circumstance,” compared with 51 percent among 2022 voters in the state. Not surprisingly, there is a substantial gap based on party, with 64 percent of young Democrats saying that it should always be legal, compared to 34 percent of Republicans. Independents, who say that they don’t lean towards either party, are much closer to the Republican stance, with 37 percent supporting abortion under any circumstance. Still, abortion bans – making it illegal in all circumstances – is very unpopular, with only 3 percent of Democrats, 5 percent of independents and 15 percent of Republicans holding such a view.

“Young people in New Jersey are rejecting abortion bans,” said Cassino. “For Republicans, the challenge is distancing themselves from extreme views in their own party if that want to have a chance with under 30s.”

In the survey, young residents also expressed a degree of skepticism about the way government works. Seventy-eight percent agree that “the current political parties are too corrupt and ineffective to actually get anything done,” with 42 percent “strongly” agreeing. This view goes across party lines: the figure is 78 percent among Democrats, and 76 percent among Republicans. This extends even to their view of democracy as an institution: 56 percent agree that “democracy is still the best way to run a government,” though Republicans are less likely to embrace that message than Democrats. Only 58 percent of Republicans agree, compared with 75 percent of Democrats. Independents are the most skeptical: only 36 percent agree.

“The fact that support for democracy, as a concept is this low should be a wakeup call for everyone,” said Cassino. “Young people don’t feel like they’ve seen democracy work, and that’s led to the very basis of our system become politicized.”

This uncertainty about the value of existing institutions goes beyond politics, and into economics as well. Forty-nine percent of residents under 30 disagree with the statement “capitalism makes sure that everyone gets exactly what they deserve in life.” That figure is 53 percent among Democrats, and 37 percent among Republicans.

Not all of the views are quite so heavily politicized. A majority of young New Jerseyans, Democrats and Republicans alike, agree that climate change represents an existential threat to society. That figure is 84 percent among Democrats, and while it’s lower among Republicans, it’s still 60 percent. Similarly, eighty-eight percent of Democrats, and 75 percent of Republicans 30 and under agree that the government should make sure that everyone has free access to basic healthcare.

“On issues like climate change and healthcare, young people seem to be well to the left of older voters,” said Cassino. “Among young people, these don’t even look like political issues: they’re just truths universally acknowledged.”

  

Methodology

The survey was conducted between December 1 and 4, 2022, using a multi-stream non-probability online stratified sample collected by CINT. Respondents were solicited to be part of the survey via online ads or membership in existing online panels. This multi-stream approach is used to maximize the diversity of the sample, but the online nature of the data collection means that some groups, such as those who do not use the internet, are necessarily excluded from the data. This means that the respondents, like respondents in all online surveys, cannot be said to be representative of the public as a whole, and the results, while weighted to approximate the characteristics of the population as a whole, may differ from that population in ways that are difficult to ascertain from within the dataset. However, the other characteristics of the sample (especially age) limit the bias resulting from these exclusions in the results presented here.

The sample was primarily designed to measure the attitudes of men ages 18 to 30 in New Jersey and across the United States, with samples in New Jersey including both men and women in that age group, and the national sample strongly oversampling men, with women used as a control/contrast group. The final sample included 534 respondents who reported going to high school in New Jersey (regardless of their current residence; 589 currently reside in New Jersey) and 1,144 respondents who went to high school in other states (1,089 who reside elsewhere). Surveys were conducted only in English.

Data for the New Jersey sample was weighted by age, reported sex and race to 2021 Census estimates for those categories.

If this were a simple random survey of the targeted populations, the margin of error for a sample of 589 New Jersey residents 18-30 years old would be +/-4.0 percentage points, at a 95 percent confidence interval. The margin of error for a sample of 1,089 US residents 18-30 years old would be +/-3.1 percentage points, at a 95 percent confidence interval. The non-probability nature of the data collection means that the use of such figures is controversial within the survey research community

This error calculation does not take into account other sources of variation inherent in public opinion studies, such as non-response, question wording, differences in translated forms, or context effects. While such errors are known to exist, they are often unquantifiable within a particular survey, and all efforts, such as randomization and extensive pre-testing of items, have been used to minimize them.

Respondents were randomly assigned to be asked some, but not all, of the survey segments. As such, samples that draw from items across different survey segments may have slightly different characteristics.

 

Weighted Sample Characteristics

589 New Jersey Residents and 1,089 US residents ages 18-30

NJ Sample, Weighted

Man                             47%                 N = 281

Woman                        45%                 N = 269

Something Else               5%                 N = 29

 

18-21                           36%                N = 215

22-25                           33%                 N = 197

26-30                           31%                 N = 186

 

White                              

48%                N = 288

Black                                             

20%                N = 117

Hispanic/Latino/a          

26%                N = 154

Asian                           

10%                N = 59

Other/Multi-racial          

12%               N = 71

 

National (non-NJ) Sample, unweighted

Man                                         87%                 N = 942

Woman                                      8%                 N = 88

Something Else                           4%                 N = 46

 

18-21, Other State                    33%                N = 376

22-25, Other State                    35%                 N = 403

26-30, Other State                    32%                 N = 366

 

White                                           

43%                N = 822

Black                                              

28%                N = 540

Hispanic/Latino/a                                     

17%                N = 332

Asian                                       

7%                  N = 140

Other/Multi-racial                                    

5%                  N = 90

 

Question Wording and Order

P1. [Half of the Respondents get this question here; half get it before P4] Do you think abortion should be legal under any circumstances, legal only under certain circumstances, or illegal in all circumstances?

  1. Legal under any circumstances
  2. Legal only under certain circumstances
  3. Illegal in all circumstances
  4. [Don’t Know/Refused]

P2. In politics today, do you consider yourself a Democrat, Republican, Independent, or something else? 

  1. Democrat                                 
  2. Republican 
  3. Independent  [ASK P2A]                                                                                                                 
  4. Something Else/Other                                            
  5. DK/Ref

P2A. [Ask only if P2 is 3] Which way do you lean?

  1. Democrat 
  2. Republican
  3. Independent                                                                                                   
  4. Something Else/Other                                            
  5. DK/Ref   

P3. In the 2020 Presidential election, did you vote for Joe Biden, Donald Trump, someone else, or did you not vote?

  1. Biden
  2. Trump
  3. Someone Else

P4. For the following statements, please indicate if you agree strongly, agree somewhat, disagree somewhat, or disagree strongly. [Shuffle order of items]

  1. Democracy is still the best way to run a government
  2. Climate change represents an existential threat to our society
  3. The government should make sure that everyone has free access to basic healthcare
  4. Capitalism makes sure that everyone gets exactly what they deserve in life
  5. It is immoral for any one person to have a billion dollars

 

  1. Agree strongly
  2. Agree somewhat
  3. Disagree somewhat
  4. Disagree strongly
  5. Don’t Know
  6. Prefer not to say

 

Release Tables        

Party Identification (including leaners)

 

NJ

18-21

22-25

26-30

Democrat or Lean Dem

52%

56%

48%

52%

Independent

23%

21%

24%

25%

Republican or Lean Rep

25%

23%

28%

23%

 

Party Identification (including leaners)

 

NJ

Men

Women

Democrat or Lean Dem

52%

46%

61%

Independent

23%

25%

19%

Republican or Lean Rep

25%

29%

20%

 

Party Identification (including leaners)

 

NJ

White

AA/Black

Asian

Hispanic

Democrat or Lean Dem

52%

43%

63%

56%

53%

Independent

23%

20%

22%

16%

40%

Republican or Lean Rep

25%

37%

15%

28%

7%

 

Do you think abortion should be…

 

NJ

Men

Women

Legal under any circumstances

49%

44%

56%

Legal only under certain circumstances

33%

34%

32%

Illegal in all circumstances

7%

9%

5%

Don’t Know/Refused

11%

13%

7%

 

Do you think abortion should be…

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Legal under any circumstances

49%

64%

37%

34%

Legal only under certain circumstances

33%

24%

42%

47%

Illegal in all circumstances

7%

3%

5%

15%

Don’t Know/Refused

11%

9%

16%

4%

 

In the 2020 Presidential Election, did you vote for.. (or did you not get a chance to vote)?

 

NJ

18-21

22-25

26-30

Biden

48%

48%

48%

48%

Trump

19%

11%

26%

23%

Someone Else/ Didn’t Vote

33%

41%

26%

29%

 

In the 2020 Presidential Election, did you vote for.. (or did you not get a chance to vote)?

 

NJ

Men

Women

Biden

48%

44%

52%

Trump

19%

22%

19%

Someone Else/ Didn’t Vote

33%

34%

29%

 

In the 2020 Presidential Election, did you vote for.. (or did you not get a chance to vote)?

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Biden

48%

80%

40%

22%

Trump

19%

6%

15%

59%

Someone Else/ Didn’t Vote

33%

14%

45%

19%

 

Democracy is still the best way to run a government

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

28%

43%

14%

27%

Agree Somewhat

28%

32%

22%

31%

Disagree Somewhat

16%

10%

24%

16%

Disagree Strongly

8%

6%

16%

13%

Don’t Know

20%

9%

24%

13%

 

The current political parties are too corrupt and ineffective to actually get anything done

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

42%

40%

47%

41%

Agree Somewhat

36%

38%

35%

35%

Disagree Somewhat

13%

14%

12%

11%

Disagree Strongly

4%

3%

0%

8%

Don’t Know

5%

5%

6%

5%

 

Climate Change represents an existential threat to our society

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

49%

65%

38%

27%

Agree Somewhat

24%

19%

27%

33%

Disagree Somewhat

16%

9%

21%

23%

Disagree Strongly

4%

1%

7%

8%

Don’t Know

7%

6%

7%

9%

 

The government should make sure that everyone has free access to basic healthcare

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

63%

74%

64%

40%

Agree Somewhat

19%

14%

12%

35%

Disagree Somewhat

7%

4%

11%

9%

Disagree Strongly

7%

4%

8%

12%

Don’t Know

4%

4%

5%

4%

 

Capitalism makes sure that everyone gets exactly what they deserve in life

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

13%

16%

8%

11%

Agree Somewhat

22%

18%

23%

32%

Disagree Somewhat

27%

30%

17%

29%

Disagree Strongly

22%

23%

35%

8%

Don’t Know

16%

13%

17%

20%

 

It is immoral for any one person to have a billion dollars

 

NJ

Dem

Indp

Rep

Agree Strongly

21%

26%

15%

16%

Agree Somewhat

23%

29%

23%

11%

Disagree Somewhat

25%

25%

26%

24%

Disagree Strongly

24%

17%

26%

35%

Don’t Know

7%

3%

10%

14%