• Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    I don’t think that your assumptions are true. Non-voters tend to be more progressive than voters, because conservatives vote religiously out of a sense of duty and responsibility, and progressives vote when they feel like it.

    This is a lever that moves in two directions. Voter suppression is a very real thing that happens in every American election. It’s practiced by conservative candidates for exactly the asymmetry I mention above.

    • I mean, non-voters aren’t much more progressive really. They’re more likely to be independents (in the US at least). See:

      They do skew a bit more D, but not massively so. They’re also largely non-white, less well educated and poorer. It’s a bit of a toss-up whether any of those demographics skew R or D.

      I don’t really see much evidence that they’re more progressive, more centrist at best really. Although I suppose if you flatten political beliefs on a 1-dimensional axis, that does mean more progressive on average.

      Do note that this differs per state, and voter turnout is also correlated with general results skewing harder in a certain direction. Complexities all around!