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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 19, 2022
National media contact: Emily Pickren, epickren@aarp.org, 202-431-7752
Pennsylvania media contact: TJ Thiessen, Tthiessen@aarp.org, 202-374-8033
New AARP Poll: Shapiro Leads Governor Race in Pennsylvania, U.S. Senate Race Tightening
Voters 50+ may tip the scales in midterm election.
HARRISBURG, Pa.—With Election Day just three weeks away, Attorney General Josh Shapiro (D) appears to be widening his lead over State Sen. Doug Mastriano (R) in the race for Governor. In contrast, Lt. Governor John Fetterman’s (D) lead over Dr. Mehmet Oz (R) in the U.S. Senate race has narrowed, according to a new AARP survey of likely Pennsylvania voters. The top issues for voters 50+ in the U.S. Senate and gubernatorial races are inflation, Social Security and Medicare.
Pennsylvanians 50+ will be key in determining who wins in November. This bloc of voters regularly plays a crucial role in Pennsylvania elections and comprises an outsized portion of the electorate. In the 2018 mid-term elections, they made up nearly 61% of all Pennsylvania voters. In addition, 85% of respondents in this age group say they are “extremely motivated” to vote in this election.
Attorney General Shapiro leads State Sen. Mastriano 53% - 42%, an eight-point swing toward Attorney General Shapiro since AARP polled likely Pennsylvania voters in June. Among voters 50+, Attorney General Shapiro holds a ten-point lead (53% - 43%). Lt. Governor Fetterman leads Dr. Oz 48% - 46%, a four-point swing toward Dr. Oz since June; Lt. Governor Fetterman leads by an identical 2% margin among voters 50+.
“The message from voters 50-plus is clear,” said Bill Johnston-Walsh, AARP Pennsylvania State Director. “They vote and they take the time to find out where candidates stand on the issues that shape their lives. From inflation and rising costs of necessities, like food and utilities, to protecting Social Security and Medicare, Pennsylvanians want to make sure that the candidates they are voting for will represent them and take action on their priorities and concerns.”
Four other key takeaways from the new poll:
AARP commissioned the bipartisan polling team of Fabrizio Ward & Impact Research to conduct a survey. The firms interviewed 1,377 likely Pennsylvania voters, which includes a statewide representative sample of 500 likely voters, with an oversample of 550 likely voters age 50 and older and an additional oversample of 327 Black likely voters age 50 and older, between October 4-12, 2022. The interviews were conducted via landline, cellphone, and SMS-to-web. The margin of sampling error for the 500 statewide sample is ±4.4%; for the 855 total sample of voters 50+ is ±3.4%; for the 400 total sample of Black voters 50+ is ±4.9%.
For more information on how, when and where to vote in Pennsylvania, visit aarp.org/PAVotes.