Will Taylor Swift's Harris endorsement influence the U.S. election?
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[September 13, 2024]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Heather Timmons
(Reuters) - Global pop star Taylor Swift's support for Kamala Harris may
have boosted the Democratic vice president's hopes of attracting young
voters, but the question remains: Will the celebrity endorsement make a
difference on Election Day?
Locked in a tight White House race, both Harris and her rival,
Republican former President Donald Trump are doing all they can to lure
voters on Election Day Nov. 5 and in early voting starting next week.
For his part, Trump dismissed Swift's Tuesday night endorsement of
Harris, saying he was "not a Taylor fan."
With voter registrations down among young people in a country where 18
is the voting age, the first challenge for either campaign may be
getting them to register to vote at all.
Young voters played a decisive role in Democratic President Joe Biden's
victory over the then-incumbent Trump in 2020. Biden captured about 61%
of the vote to Trump's 36% of voters between the ages of 18 and 29,
according to data from Tufts University.
A July 2024 analysis by Tufts University's youth civic engagement group,
CIRCLE, found that voter registrations have dropped significantly since
then in 36 states among those aged 18-29. Harris launched her campaign
on July 21 after Biden withdrew.
"Registering youths remains a major task in the months ahead," the
analysis said.
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Enter Swift, an artist so successful she tied hip-hop star Beyonce's
record of 30 lifetime awards at the MTV Video Music Awards on Wednesday
night. A 2023 Morning Consult poll found that 55% of self-described
Swift fans were Democrats and 45% were millennials aged 28 to 43.
"I'm voting for @kamalaharris because she fights for the rights and
causes I believe need a warrior to champion them," Swift wrote on
Tuesday to her 284 million Instagram followers, urging them to register
to vote and make their own choice.
Her post drew 10.4 million "likes." The vote.gov website received
405,999 visitors in the 24 hours after Swift shared a custom URL with
followers, a U.S. government spokesperson said.
Harris aides say they would love for Swift to actively campaign, such as
by appearing at a rally in her native Pennsylvania, a battleground state
that could well decide the election.
But the campaign itself was not involved in Swift's decision to back
Harris.
The vice president's aides said they learned of Swift's support only
when the entertainer, 34, posted it on Instagram minutes after the vice
president stepped off the debate stage in Philadelphia on Tuesday night.
A QUESTION OF INFLUENCEWhat difference does a celebrity endorsement
make?
A 2008 Northwestern University report found Oprah Winfrey's endorsement
added a million votes to Barack Obama's tally.
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Taylor Swift attends the MTV Video Music Awards in Elmont, New York,
U.S., September 11, 2024. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
 But a 2010 North Carolina State
University report found celebrity endorsements by George Clooney and
Angelina Jolie did little to move the political needle.
Margaretha Bentley, a professor at Arizona State
University whose class studies Swift’s social importance, is unsure
whether the pop singer will have an impact. She asked her students
earlier this year whether a Swift endorsement would matter.
Some said they would follow Swift’s lead and others said it would
prompt them to do more research. "Some students told me they listen
to celebrities when it comes to, like, what coffee they would drink,
not politics,” Bentley said.
A Swift fan at the VMA awards on Wednesday, Morgan Paris, said:
"It's good that she said what she feels. And I mean, I feel like her
politics and her music are two separate things, so you can't really
combine them."
Ashley Spillane wrote in a study published last month by Harvard's
Kennedy School that non-profits found "higher rates of online voter
registration or poll worker sign-ups when a celebrity promotes these
calls to action."
"While some polling shows that people claim they aren’t influenced
by celebrity voices when it comes to politics, more rigorous
evidence indicates that these voices are incredibly powerful,"
Spillane said.
SWIFT ACTION ON BEHALF OF HARRIS
The Harris campaign and their supporters are building on the
endorsement, announcing pre-orders for its latest campaign wear:
Swift fan-inspired friendship bracelets.
The progressive group MoveOn.org is selling Swift T-shirts that play
on Swift’s ongoing Eras concert tour. The shirt, reading “In My
Voting Era," is the fastest selling item the group has sold this
year, spokesperson Britt Jacovich said.
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Voters of Tomorrow, which seeks to boost the youth vote, is teaming
up with the informal group "Swifties for Harris" on a phone bank on
Saturday to target college students in Georgia and Wisconsin, both
battleground states like Pennsylvania.
Swift "is one of the most influential people of our generation, and
we're definitely excited to see how we can take her message and turn
that into more political action and get more people involved," said
Jessica Siles, a spokesperson for Voters of Tomorrow.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; Additional reporting by Stephanie
Kelly, Hussein Awaaile and Alicia Powell; Writing by Heather
Timmons; Editing by Howard Goller)
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