亚洲AV

When it comes to voting, Mason students are ahead of the curve

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Activity outside the Fairfax Campus polling place in 2018. Photo by Lathan Goumas/Strategic Communications

亚洲AV students voted at a higher rate than the national student average in the 2020 elections, and also outperformed the average voting rates of public institutions, according to the by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life at Tufts University.

According to , Mason students voted at a rate of 71.8% in 2020. The national rate for all institutions was 66%. The rate for public institutions was 69%.

The report comes after Mason was listed as a 鈥鈥 by Washington Monthly.

Those outcomes are the result of several factors, said Rose Pascarell, vice president for at Mason, including Mason鈥檚 proximity to Washington, D.C, having a polling place on the Fairfax Campus, and a campus-wide sensibility for voter participation that the university actively cultivates.

鈥淥ur students are more engaged and more understanding of the role they play in the trajectory of the country, that their role in voting makes a difference,鈥 Pascarell said. 鈥淥ne of the things we do is encourage students to see themselves as change-makers. That happens in a number of different ways鈥攖hrough voting, through protesting, through course-taking, through research.鈥

It also happens with the help of the program, Pascarell said, which encourages students to register and vote, helps educate students about key issues, helps brings candidates to campus, and conducts exit polling to examine opinions on the issues.

It doesn鈥檛 hurt that Mason鈥檚 Fairfax Campus is only 20 miles from Washington, D.C., said master鈥檚 student Meg Thornberry.

鈥淓specially since a lot of Mason students are originally from the area,鈥 said Thornberry, who is studying and is a member of the Mason Votes editorial board. 鈥淧eople just grow up with and see firsthand the process and are aware of it in a way that makes it a no-brainer to take part.鈥

Additionally, 鈥淲e have a lot of students who come to the D.C. area because they want to get involved civically, or they want to get involved with the federal government or politics or international relations,鈥 said Alissa Karton, assistant to the vice president and director of special projects at University Life. 鈥淭hat is definitely part of it.鈥

Some of the numbers in the study were fascinating.

Early voting at Mason increased 31 points to 32% in 2020 compared to 2016. 鈥淣ot-in-person鈥 voting rose by 20 points to 34%, with the pandemic certainly playing a role.

Voting by the 18-21 age group was at 69 percent, compared to 60 percent in 2016; the nine-point increase was the largest of any age group at the university. First- and second-year student voting rates increased nine points to 63% and 66%, respectively. Undergraduate voting rates increased from 60% to 67%.

Those results are important, the study said, because 鈥渧oting is habit-forming, and young voters will usually continue as voters in subsequent elections.鈥

鈥淥ur proximity to D.C. is absolutely a contributing factor,鈥 Pascarell said of Mason鈥檚 high voting turnout. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also true we try to leverage those opportunities so that students have a number of ways they can participate in what鈥檚 happening and to make their voices heard.鈥