The Truth Behind The ‘72% Of Young People Turned Out To Vote’ Fact Going Viral

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Have the young people of Britain just pulled off something incredible in the General Election?

You may or may not have seen the reports circulating that the election has sparked a 72% turnout among voters aged 18 to 24.

The truth is, there is no way of knowing just yet.  So where did that figure come from?

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The earliest claim, according to Indy 100,  originated from a tweet by Alex Cairns, a blogger at HuffPost.

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At 11.06pm, just one hour after the polls closed and before any seats were declared, he said his ‘contacts’ had told him the turnout ‘will be around 72/73%’.

And a couple of hours later, at 1.46am, Malia Bouattia, the President of the National Union of Students sent out a tweet, saying early reports suggest 72% of 18-24s voted. 

The speculation is ‘likely based on increased overall turnout’ and Labour doing ‘much better than initially expected’.

While it was expected to be a landslide for the Conservatives, ending up with an increased majority. Instead Labour have gained at least 29 seats, and the Tories have lost at least 12 – resulting in a hung parliament.

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In the last four general elections (2001, 2005, 2010 and 2015), youth turnout was only around 40%, writes the Metro.

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43% of people aged 18 to 24 voted in the last election and in the EU referendum, only 64%.

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And, this election saw a general turnout of 68%, which is the highest since Labour won under Tony Blair in 1997.

Amazing show… if true!