Health, Wealth, and Voting Trajectories in Later Life.

J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci

Center for Demography of Health and Aging, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how voting behaviors change in older adults by analyzing data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study in connection with state voter files to track voting patterns over time.
  • Researchers identified five voting types based on turnout and methods and explored how factors like health and wealth influence voting participation in later life.
  • Findings reveal that both health and wealth positively relate to voter turnout, with healthier older adults more likely to vote in-person, while absentee voting is common among less healthy, wealthier individuals; emotional issues particularly hinder voting among those with less wealth.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Much of what we know about voting behaviors is based on cross-sectional comparisons of voters at different ages. This study draws on a unique linkage between the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study and state voter files to characterize voting trajectories in later life and explore their determinants.

Methods: Using sequence analysis, we identify 5 voting typologies based on turnout and voting methods over 8 biennial elections. Using multinomial logistic and Poisson regressions, we examine the role of physical, cognitive, and mental health and wealth in shaping enfranchisement and civic participation at older ages.

Results: Health and wealth are both positively associated with voter turnout, but the negative impact of poor health on voting declines with increasing wealth. Voting at the polls and early voting are more common among healthier older adults, whereas absentee voting is more common among older voters who are more affluent, less healthy, or both. Among those less wealthy, absentee methods mitigate the impact of poor health for previously active voters, but do not compensate for a lower turnout rate. In addition to physical and cognitive limitations, emotional difficulties and depression reduce turnout, particularly among the least wealthy.

Discussion: In this sample of older, largely White, primarily Midwestern committed voters, civic participation at older ages is shaped by individual experiences with wealth and health across the life course as well as political structures that facilitate or restrict the ability of individuals to consistently participate in elections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8974326PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbab191DOI Listing

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