Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters
Press
Donate
My Account
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
COVID-19
Research Topics
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
My Account
DONATE
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
COVID-19
Home
Research Topics
Politics & Policy
U.S. Elections & Voters
Voters & Voting
Voter Participation
Pew Research Center
September 26, 2018
2. Democrats have edge in 2018 midterm voting preferences
1
←
Prev Page
Page
1
Page
2
Page
3
Page
4
Page
5
Page
6
Page
7
Next Page
→
Download
1
Embed
Post Infographics
2. Democrats have edge in 2018 midterm voting preferences
Large differences in 2018 midterm preferences by gender, education, age
Majority of voters say they are more enthusiastic than usual about voting
Democratic supporters more enthusiastic than in previous midterms
Democratic voters more likely than GOP voters to report following election news
Most say Trump is a factor in their congressional vote
Most Democrats view their midterm vote as being ‘against’ Trump; fewer Republicans say their vote is ‘for’ him
Large shares of voters say control of Congress will be factor in their vote
Copyright 2023 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers