- A new set of polls from Insider in conjunction with SurveyMonkey found Americans without a college degree to be far more likely than other groups to say they didn't intend to vote in the
2020 election . - Among those without a high-school diploma or equivalent, 40% said they had no plans to vote this year.
- Those responses make the group 28% more likely than the average respondent to not vote.
- Almost 20% of those with no more than a high-school diploma or equivalent said they wouldn't vote, with a steep drop-off in non-voter responses from there among other demographics.
A new round of Insider polls found voters without college degrees to be significantly more likely than the average respondent to say they didn't intend to vote in the 2020 election.
This data is based on an aggregation of eight polls with a combined 8,975 respondents conducted on SurveyMonkey Audience from August through early October. Respondents were asked whether they were registered to vote and then subsequently whether they intended to vote in the 2020 election, along with other demographic questions. Overall, 12% of respondents indicated they probably or definitely would not vote in the 2020 election.
Americans without a high-school diploma were 28 percentage points more likely than overall respondents to say they were not planning to vote.
Those whose highest level of education was a high-school diploma or equivalent were 7 percentage points more likely than the average respondent to say they weren't planning on
Among voters with less than a high-school diploma, 40% said they had no plans to vote — by far the highest of any subsection.
Nearly 20% of high-school-diploma respondents said they wouldn't vote, and then there was another drop-off from there.
- 11% of respondents with some college but no degree said they didn't intend to vote
- 10% of those with an associate's degree said they had no plans to vote
- 8% with graduate degrees said they had no intention of voting
- 7% with bachelor's degrees said they were not voting in 2020
These responses line up with previous surveys on the correlation between education level and voting.
In a nonpartisan Knight Foundation study of the 43% of eligible voters who did not turn out in 2016, nonvoters were found to be much less likely to be informed about the political process and to actively seek out news.
"A significant gap between voters and
Beyond not keeping up as much with the news, the Knight Foundation study found nonvoters also struggled with navigating through the voting process.
With white voters without a college degree making up a substantial portion of President
The Knight Foundation study, however, found nonvoters to be more evenly split on ideology than the actual electorate, so if the 43% who didn't vote in 2016 had actually voted, it would have led to relatively even gains for both candidates.
Insider's polling also found white respondents to be 3 percentage points less likely than the average respondent to mark themselves down as a nonvoter, with just 9% of white respondents overall saying they have no plans to vote.
SurveyMonkey Audience polls from a national sample balanced by census data of age and gender. Respondents are incentivized to complete surveys through charitable contributions. Generally speaking, digital polling tends to skew toward people with access to the internet. SurveyMonkey Audience doesn't try to weight its sample based on race or income.
More on nonvoters:
Who the hell are nonvoters? We polled them and found the 6 kinds of people who don't vote
Insider poll: More than 20% of Asian Americans say they do not plan on voting in the 2020 election
Unemployed Americans are more likely to not vote, a new Insider poll finds
America's 1.3 million Jehovah's Witnesses will be sitting out the election
Expanded Coverage Module: insider-voting-guide