The presidency may be determined by razor-thin margins in swing states this November. Voters from groups traditionally less likely to turn out – such as non-college-educated individuals, low-income Americans and voters of color – could play a pivotal role in the outcome.
Our panel explores the key issues driving engagement among these underrepresented voters, the challenges they may face, such as voter suppression and misinformation, and their potential impact on swing state results.
Moderated by Jane Coaston, contributing opinion writer, The New York Times; fellow, USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future.
With:
Mike Madrid, political consultant; author, The Latino Century: How America’s Largest Minority is Transforming Democracy; fellow, USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future
Eugene Scott, host, Axios Live; former national political reporter, The Washington Post
Learn more about the Dornsife Dialogues and sign up for the next live event here.
10/18/24 • 59 min
Dornsife Dialogues - How Underrepresented Voters Could Shape the 2024 Election
Transcript
00:00:00:12 - 00:00:32:01
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Welcome to the podcast version of Dornsife Dialogs, hosted by the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Conversations feature our distinguished scholars, alumni and other thought leaders discussing the fascinating issues that matter to you. You can also find video recordings of these discussions on the USC Dornsife YouTube channel. We begin this Dornsife dialog with an introduction from interim Dean Mo Alma Jha.
00:00:32:03 - 00
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