Anna greenberg pollster huffington
Polling industry and the demands that have come with it.!
Peter Levine, Tufts University
Bernie Sanders supporters line up in California. Reuters/Mike Blake
Young Americans don't care much for political parties.
Pollsters recognize something called social desirability bias, when voters are reluctant to tell an interviewer they hold an unpopular position.
According to the Pew Research Center, 48 percent of millennials (ages 18-33) identify as independents. That's almost as many as identify as Democrats (28 percent) and Republicans (18 percent) put together.
Political scientists are often skeptical about the independent option in surveys.
Most individuals who choose to call themselves "independents" still vote consistently with one party or the other. They are partisans except in name.
Even if that's true, the lack of loyalty or concern for parties still has consequences.
For instance, presidential primary campaigns were established to allow a party's members to choose its candidate. But the research team at Tufts University's Tisch College, where I study civic engagement, estimates that young Americans (18-30) have so far cast more votes for Senator Bernie Sanders