Over the past few years, the outpouring of political punditry about the MAGA movement’s supposed appeal among young voters has largely obscured Donald Trump and his allies’ brazen efforts to discourage many of those voters from reaching the polls.
Reading some of these articles, I’ve often asked myself, if MAGA world were truly confident in their appeal among this group, why would they be trying so desperately to stop so many of them from voting?
In fact, Republicans over the past decade have gerrymandered districts to deliberately dilute the voting power of students on college campuses and introduced new voter ID restrictions that make it harder for students to vote with school identification cards that previously sufficed in their states.
And if there were any doubt about the GOP’s war on young voters, Trump-linked lawyer Cleta Mitchell gave the game away back in 2023, when she gave a presentation to GOP donors in which she warned about the “young people effort” to vote, lamenting that polling places are too close to dormitories, which allows students to simply “roll out of bed, vote and go back to bed.”
That angst over college voters is necessary context for the Trump administration’s newly announced probe of Tufts University in Massachusetts over a program meant to study and promote voter participation among students.
Following Trump’s antidemocratic claim that Republicans should “take over” elections in numerous states, the Education Department announced a probe last Thursday of Tufts in a press release claiming — without evidence — that the university may have put students’ voter information at risk by participating in the National Study of Learning, Voting and Engagement. Tufts describes the program as “a service to over 1,000 U.S. colleges and universities that can use it to understand and improve their student voting rates.” But the Education Department’s press release alleges the probe is needed due to what it’s calling “reports alleging that the process of compiling NSLVE data involves illegally sharing college students’ data with third parties to influence elections.”
“American colleges and universities should be focused on teaching, learning, and research — not influencing elections,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in the release. “The Biden Administration, with little to no regard for student privacy laws, openly encouraged institutions to share and utilize student data in order to target certain populations.”








