• Perhaps “just entering” was an overstatement.

      Wikipedia has the Gen-Z range from 1997-2012, so they’re 13-28. This year, about 68% are eligible to vote; something over 50% were eligible to vote in the last presidential election, and one statistic I saw claimed they made up only about 8% of the total vote. They are, however, the biggest generation in history, ever. Given that the birth rates in the US stopped climbing and started falling in 2007, it’s conceivable that they may be the biggest generation ever, forever.

      In any case, statistically, young people vote at far lower rates than older; 18-29 (GenZ, at the moment) vote around 50%. At around 30 it’s 60%, and by 65 it’s over 70%.

      So, given that some 65% of Gen Z are eligible to vote, and statistically about half of them will at this age bracket, that’s only about 35% of Gen Z voting. That number will grow over three next decade and become the dominant number, but right now it’s fairly small… hence “just entering voting age.”

      You’re right, my wording wasn’t accurate; the meaning was.

      Ancillarily, births in the US peaked at 4.3M births in 2007 and have been declining since; they haven’t hit 4M again since, and are down to 3.6M in 2025, below 1994 (3.9M) levels.

    • jsomae@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      21
      ·
      7 days ago

      well, those who are born in 2010 can’t vote, and those born in 1997 can vote. Some of them are too young to vote and some are not. So they’re entering voting age.

    • Azteh@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      12
      ·
      7 days ago

      Well the last couple of years still can’t vote, so I imagine that’s what they meant