NY POST: Younger voters outnumber older crowds in final days of early voting for NYC mayoral election
NY POST: Younger voters outnumber older crowds in final days of early voting for NYC mayoral election
By Craig McCarthy and Caitlin McCormack
Gen Zers and Millennials outnumbered their older counterparts at the polls on the final days of early voting in the Big Apple — as a shocking new mayoral election poll showed former Gov. Andrew Cuomo cut into Zohran Mamdani’s once-commanding lead.
From Friday through Sunday, roughly 186,843 people between the ages of 18 and 49 cast their ballots, as opposed to the 148,462 voters over the age of 50, according to city Board of Education data reviewed by The Post.
“There [are] definitely more people to look out [for] on Election Day, which is pretty common. During the primary, there was a depression of the 50-plus vote, probably because it was hot as hell,” Graves said.
“The younger ones were out there. I think what we are going to see is younger people vote early, so it’s not a big surprise that early voting tends to be younger than those who vote on Election Day. And younger voters obviously benefit Mamdani.”
Mamdani, 34, created a cult following through his campaign crafted around savvy online trends and boots-on-the-ground canvassing in the boroughs.
His campaign spread well beyond the confines of the Big Apple, but he grappled with winning over older audiences who are trepidatious about his liberal policies, including fairytale promises to freeze the rent.
Graves predicted the overall vote could crack 2 million for the first time since 1969, when John Lindsay clinched his contentious reelection despite losing the Republican primary and opting to run as a Liberal.
By the time early voting ended on Sunday night, more than 730,000 New Yorkers had flocked to the polls