Enthusiasm for Harris is fueling a surge in voter registration
Eve Levenson’s job looked very different just over a month ago.
The 24-year-old is the National Youth Engagement Director for Vice President Harris’s presidential campaign, a role she’s had since the beginning of the year when President Biden was seeking re-election. Her task has been the same throughout: get young voters to the polls this fall.
But as she addressed a room of Gen Z organizers last week at a coffee shop in Chicago, wearing a handful of friendship bracelets that said, ‘Kamala,’ ‘political girlie,’ and ‘voting era,’ there’s a new playing field.
“It’s been so great to see the attention and the energy online,” Levenson said. “We’re really focused on how do we make sure that we maintain that energy and how do we then harness that energy?”
That’s a goal shared by many young organizers also working to rally youth support after a boost in enthusiasm for Harris among voters under 30 – the same demographic that supported Biden four years ago but soured on him over the past year.
But making that support stick is a daunting task given how recently Harris launched her campaign and how historically unreliable young voters are in consistently turning out to vote – despite notable increases over the past decade. [Continue reading…]
The Harris Effect – in the 13 states that have updated voter files since July 21st, we are seeing incredible surges in voter registration relative to the same time period in 2024, driven by women, voters of color, and young voters. pic.twitter.com/x6AGViJdjm
— Tom Bonier (@tbonier) August 27, 2024
[This tweet should say the “same time period in 2020” — not 2024.]