On this page: About the National Data | Methodology | History
About the National Data
Data
Data Source: Current Population Survey (CPS), Census and DOL/BLS
Baseline: 53.4 percent of US citizens 18 years and older reported voting in the federal, state, and/or local November election in 2018
Target: 58.4 percent
Methodology
Questions used to obtain the national baseline data
From the Current Population Survey
In recent years, voter-participation data were derived from replies to the following questions. Voting age citizens were asked:
"In any election some people are not able to vote because they are sick or busy, or have some other reason, and others do not want to vote. Did (this person) vote in the election held on November (date varies)?"Respondents were classified as either "voted" or "did not vote."
Voting-age citizens are 18 years or older.
Methodology notes
Voting and Registration data have been collected biennially in the November Current Population Survey (CPS) since 1964. The statistics presented are based on replies to survey inquiries about whether individuals were registered and/or voted in specific national elections. For the purpose of these estimates, election types are considered to be either Congressional (e.g. 2002, 2006, etc.) or Presidential (e.g. 2004, 2008, etc.). Only congressional election type estimates are presented for SDOH-07.
The voting-age population includes a considerable number of people who are not eligible to vote despite meeting citizen and age requirements. In addition, some people are not permitted to vote because they have been committed to the penal system, mental hospitals, or other institutions, or because they fail to meet state and local resident requirements for various reasons. The eligibility to vote is governed by state laws – legalities that differ from one another in many respects.
People who are not United States citizens are not eligible to vote.
Over the years, changes have been made to the Voting and Registration supplement. The only constant is that in all iterations of the survey a separate question has been included regarding both voting and registration. In some years (1982, '84, '86, '90) these were the only questions asked. In other years, additional questions were included. For example, in 1984, respondents were asked a total of six questions, two of which concerned the time of day that a respondent voted. Similarly, in 1988 respondents were asked if they had registered for that election specifically.
The Voting and Registration supplement has remained relatively consistent since 1996. In that year, respondents were asked specifically whether or not they registered to vote after January 1st, 1995. This allowed analysts to directly assess the influence of the National Voter Registration Act (or The Motor Voter Act). In 2004, the Census Bureau stopped asking specifically about this date, but the supplement continues to gather information on whether respondents were registered to vote and by what means this registration occurred.
History
This objective was recategorized from research objective SDOH-R02 to a core objective in 2023.
1. Effect size h=0.1 was chosen to correspond with 10% improvement from a baseline of 50%.