voters read - readers vote

26
Readers Vote, Voters Read: Voters & Newspaper Media 2012

Upload: melissa-shapiro

Post on 29-Mar-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

results of voter survey Moore Research, sponsored by National newspaper Association

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Readers Vote, Voters Read:Voters & Newspaper Media 2012

Page 2: Voters Read - Readers Vote

131 million

146 million

206 million

0 25 50 75 100 125 150 175 200 225

Voted

Registered to Vote

Eligible to Vote

2008 Election (Millions of U.S. Citizens, 18+)

Reference Point: Voting in 2008

2Source: Census Bureau, “Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2008”

71% of Eligible

64% of Eligible

90% of those who registered … voted

Eligible Base = 100%

Page 3: Voters Read - Readers Vote

2008: Those Who Register … Vote

3Source: Census Bureau, “Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2008”

And the older you are, the more likely you are to register and vote.

Age

% Eligible Who 

Registered

% of Registered Who Voted

18‐34 53% 85%

35‐44 63% 90%

45‐54 67% 92%

55‐64 71% 93%65+ 70% 91%

Page 4: Voters Read - Readers Vote

New Survey Data for 2012

• Sample frame: current registered voters

• Online survey: conducted by Moore Information

• Respondents: 2,000 registered voters

• Fieldwork: conducted January 17-18, 2012

4Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 5: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Overall Results

92%

74%63%

ʹ08 Presidential Last Statewide Election Last Local Election

Voted in Election (Registered Voters)

5Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 6: Voters Read - Readers Vote

18%

22%

19%

17%

23%

0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%

18‐34

35‐44

45‐54

55‐64

65+

Age Composition of Registered Voters in Survey

Voter Base Is Aging

6

40%59%

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 7: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Voting Skews by Age

7

Among those registered to vote:

Voting in Recent Election Total 18‐34 35‐44 45‐54 55‐64 65+I voted in the 2008 presidential election.

92% 82% 92% 94% 95% 96%

I voted in the last election in my state for statewide offices, such as governoror state legislature.

  74% 54% 71% 76% 82% 84%

I voted in the last election for local offices, such as city or county or township or school board.

63% 44% 57% 66% 71% 76%

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 8: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Voters Connect With Newspaper Media

57%62% 64%

76% 78% 79%84% 86% 86%

ʹ08 Presidential Last Statewide Election

Last Local Election

Daily/Several Times Per Week

Once a Week or More Often

Print/Online Once a Week or More Often

8Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 9: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Older Voters Connect More Often

9

Newspaper Media 18‐34 35‐44 45‐54 55‐64 65+Read Daily/Several Times Per Week 44% 51% 57% 60% 65%Read Once a Week or More Often 67% 73% 78% 76% 79%Print/Website Once a Week or More 79% 84% 85% 83% 84%

Among those registered to vote:

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 10: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Voters and Sunday Reading

10

78% of registered voters have read/looked into Sunday newspapers.

70% read every Sunday or most Sundays.

56% of those who have read on Sunday do so every Sunday.

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 11: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Party Affiliation and Newspaper Media

11Source: Moore Information, January 2012

56%

74%

83%

53%

73%

81%

57%

76%

84%

Read Daily/Several Times Per Week Read Once a Week or More Often Print/Website Once a Week or More

Rep.

Ind.

Dem.

Page 12: Voters Read - Readers Vote

The Importance of Being Local 

12

Page 13: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Reliable, Accurate,In‐Depth Information

13Source: Moore Information, January 2012 

For local political/civic issues that impact your specific locality, five‐point scale:

Total Reliable (4‐5)

Local Newspapers 57%Local TV Stations 55%Local Radio Stations 43%Local Websites 39%Social Media Websites 14%

Page 14: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Reliable, Accurate Websites

14Source: Moore Information

For local political/civic issues that impact your specific locality, five‐point scale:

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Total Reliable ( 4‐5)

Local Newspaper's website 51%

Local TV Station's Website 50%

Local Radio Station's Website 36%

Other Types of Websites 23%

Candidate's website 22%

Social Media Websites 14%

Page 15: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Voters Age 18‐34 and Websites

15

For local political/civic issues that impact your specific locality, five‐point scale:

(Total Reliable, 4‐5)

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

56%

52%

35%33%

40%

22%

Local Newspaper’s Website

Local TV Station’s Website 

Local Radio Station's Website

Other Types of Websites

Candidate’s Website Social Media Websites

Page 16: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Are Political Ads Annoying?

16

Page 17: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Newspaper Ads: Least Annoying

17

54%50%

43%39%

27%

18%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Local TV Network TV Cable TV Radio Internet Local Newspapers

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 18: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Older Voters: More Annoyed

18

“When you see advertising for candidates running for public office, in which of the following media do you find the advertising annoying?“

18‐34 35‐44 45‐54 55‐64 65+

Local TV 49% 58% 51% 53% 56%Network TV 44% 50% 49% 50% 57%Cable TV 47% 43% 38% 39% 47%Radio 44% 43% 35% 41% 32%Internet 25% 27% 23% 27% 30%Local Newspapers 15% 14% 21% 19% 22%

Source: Moore InformationSource: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 19: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Mobile Platforms

19

• One in four (25%)report planning to use a mobile device (smartphone or tablet) to check for news about campaigns and elections.

Source: Moore InformationSource: Moore Information January, 2012

Page 20: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Mobile News Sources

20

Newspaper Sources 58%National TV Sources 58%Social Media Websites 41%Local TV Sources 33%Other Kinds of Sources 27%Radio Sources 20%

For those 25% who plan to use mobile devices to check for campaign/election news: 

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 21: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Mobile News Use Skews Young

21

Age breakdown of 25% who plan to use mobile devices to check campaign/election news: 

25%

48%

36%

18%16%

7%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

All Ages 18‐34 35‐44 45‐54 55‐64 65+

Plan to Use Mobile Device to Check Campaign/Election News

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 22: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Younger Voters and Mobile

22

For those 48% of ages 18‐34 who plan to use mobile devices to check for campaign/election news: 

Newspaper Sources 62%National TV Sources 55%Social Media Websites 53%Local TV Sources 34%Other Kinds of Sources 26%Radio Sources 18%

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 23: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Political Contributors

23

• Overall, slightly more than 1 in 10 (11%) reported contributing money to a political organization or candidate since they last voted or registered to vote.

• For those who voted in last local election, 14% contributed money.

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

Page 24: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Contributors Are Readers

24

Among those 11% who contributed money to political organizations/candidates:

Source: Moore Information, January 2012

82%

63%

91%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Read Daily/Several Times Per Week

Newspaper Website Once a Week or More

Print/Website Once a Week or More Often

Page 25: Voters Read - Readers Vote

Summary

25

Those who register are highly

inclined to turn out to vote.

Four in 10 registered voters are 55+;

nearly six in 10 are 45+.

Voters are connected with

newspaper media.

Newspapers’ reach among older

voters is significant.

Voters rely on local newspapers for

local civic and political issues.

Voters are least annoyed by newspaper campaign ads.

Local newspaper websites are especially reliable for younger voters.

Mobile devices for campaign news attract 1 in 4 voters, especially the young.

Newspaper sources on mobile devices resonate with a young audience.

Monetary contributors are a small portion of voters overall, but they are highly engaged with newspaper media.

Newspaper Association of America

Page 26: Voters Read - Readers Vote

NAA ContactsCaroline Little, President & CEO: [email protected]

Randy Bennett, SVP/Business Development: [email protected]

Mort Goldstrom, VP/Advertising: [email protected]

Jim Conaghan, VP/Research: [email protected]