This is the first in a series of blogs leading up to the provincial election that will look at voter segments their party preferences and key ridings.


Who votes? It鈥檚 a question that comes up every election鈥攁nd it鈥檚 an important one.

In the last election, the average voter turnout (share of voters on the voters鈥 list who cast a ballot) was barely over 50 per cent.

That鈥檚 down considerably over the past 40 years when about two-thirds of voters cast a ballot. But aside from highlighting a significant drop in voter turnout, that stat alone doesn鈥檛 tell us much.

Conventional wisdom suggests older voters are most likely to turn up at the ballot box than younger people.

But do the numbers bear this out? Is this true of all voters or does it vary depending on where they live and what they believe? Are there other important differences that can be used to help predict voter behaviour at the ballot box?

The work we do here at can help answer those questions. By cross-referencing the returns from the last provincial election in 2014 with our segmentation system, which divides Canadian households in to one of 68 lifestyle types, we get a rich, nuanced picture of voting tendencies by small segments of society.

And before you ask, this approach respects everyone鈥檚 privacy because we don鈥檛 use any individual data. In fact, there is no way we could since voting data is anonymous.

So who votes?

Three of the seven PRIZM segments

Suburban cultural enclaves have low turnout. This is a pattern that may come as a surprise.

The ridings with some of the lowest turnout in the province using the 2014 data mapped onto 2018 riding boundaries are:

  • Brampton West (39.6%)
  • Mississauga-Malton (40.1%)
  • Humber River-Black Creek (42.2%)
  • Mississauga Centre (42.9%)

Some of the groups driving this low turnout are from segments we describe as Newcomers Rising, Asian New Wave and South Asian Achievers. Generally these segments are comprised of middle-income, educated populations.

Given the growing cultural diversity of our country, engaging these voters in elections is critical to ensuring that government more fully represents the interests of its citizens.

One of the things PRIZM allows us to do is examine the most prominent social values within each segment (we track 95 distinct traits). With respect to these segments we see social values that signify a strong Importance of Status, which reflects belief in traditional family structures.

They also show strong support for Multiculturalism, among many other insightful characteristics that could imply the need for changes in how we鈥檝e traditionally encouraged participation in the electoral process鈥攁nd for the political parties to influence which way they vote.

Moving turnout by a few points with these voters could change the winning party in several ridings鈥攁nd possibly the election鈥攊f the candidates and parties are able to focus their efforts on the right issues and mobilizing the vote.

Wealthier segments vote more than poorer ones. To assess this we turned to our PRIZM segmentation system again, but this time we bundled our 68 segments in to seven groups based on shared similarities between their demographics, their turnout at elections and party preference.

It鈥檚 important to note that each of these groups had a wide distribution of household incomes. Within every voter group, the more affluent PRIZM segments have the best voter turnout. Based on these findings we might surmise that the wealthy feel they have enough of a stake in the outcome of elections to get out and participate. Or conversely, the less wealthy are less likely to feel that voting is essential to looking after their interests.

Younger segments vote less than older ones. It appears conventional wisdom is accurate here.

For example, the segment we call Grey Pride had the highest turnout at 62.6%.

The poorest turnout was a low-income, young segment called Young & Connected, with just 38.9% casting a ballot in 2014.

Clearly there is a generational difference in the perceived value of voting in elections. What鈥檚 interesting is that the younger segments have a strong belief in Active Government, but also have strong Rejection of Authority and weak sense of Duty.

So they would need to be convinced (not in a top-down, authoritarian way, of course) of the value of voting and shown how effective government services need participation in the electoral process. They鈥檇 probably respond less well than older citizens to a message telling them they should vote because it鈥檚 a responsibility of being in a democratic society.

The two PRIZM segments with highest and lowest

So what do we think of the 鈥渙lder people vote and younger people don鈥檛鈥 wisdom?

It has truth to it, but what鈥檚 clear is that voting dynamics are multifactorial so it鈥檚 important to understand how a confluence of factors influences behaviours on smaller segments of society, to be targeted and effective in influencing their behaviours.

In the next blog, we鈥檒l discuss more about the voter segments I mentioned earlier and their party preferences. This will help narrow down who to watch closely on election night.

What PRIZM5 segment do you belong to?

Rupen Seoni is Senior Vice President and Practice Leader at Environics Analytics. He provided commentary on voter segments and demographics in CTV鈥檚 federal election coverage and will be part of CTV鈥檚 provincial election night coverage on June 7. This is the first in a series of blogs leading up to the provincial election that will look at voter segments their party preferences and key ridings.