Here and Now
Jim Flaherty on Older Wisconsin Voters in the 2024 Election
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2315 | 6m 2sVideo has Closed Captions
Jim Flaherty on the enthusiasm of voters over the age of 50 for the 2024 election.
AARP Wisconsin Communications Director Jim Flaherty discusses the enthusiasm of voters over the age of 50 for the 2024 election and the issues of Social Security, drug prices and long-term home care.
Here and Now
Jim Flaherty on Older Wisconsin Voters in the 2024 Election
Clip: Season 2300 Episode 2315 | 6m 2sVideo has Closed Captions
AARP Wisconsin Communications Director Jim Flaherty discusses the enthusiasm of voters over the age of 50 for the 2024 election and the issues of Social Security, drug prices and long-term home care.
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Aditi Debnath for "Here& Now".
>> A lot of attention is paid to the youth vote, especially.
Will they or won't they cast a ballot?
But the senior vote is much more assured.
And in Wisconsin, people over the age of 50 are the largest voting bloc.
That's according to AARP Wisconsin.
Out with a recent election poll heading into November five.
Jim Flaherty of AARP Wisconsin joins us now.
And thanks for being here.
>> Oh, thanks for having me.
>> So when we say that the senior vote in Wisconsin is more assured, what does your poll say about their enthusiasm to vote?
>> Well, our poll, which came out after the last presidential debate.
So fresh in people's minds, shows that those aged 50 and over are the most motivated demographic of any voters in Wisconsin.
More than nine out of ten voters over age 50 Hepp were polled said that they are extremely motivated to vote in this election, which should be a wake up call for candidates to say, hey, you got to start listening to what these 50 plus voters are saying.
>> So as with other polls, the candidates in the presidential and U.S. Senate race here are neck and neck.
Apart from the horse race of it, though.
What issues are especially salient for people over 50?
Well, 77% of voters aged 50 and older are saying that candidates position on social Security are very, very important to them.
>> That's followed by obviously Medicare.
Same.
Just about as high.
69% are helping people to remain living in their homes as long as possible.
We call those family caregivers 63%.
Cost of prescription drugs and their medications is still very much top of mind.
Four out of five.
So 79% of Wisconsin voters prefer a member of Congress who wants Medicare to continue to negotiate for lower drug prices.
So, you know, these are these are pocketbook issues.
You know, can I afford to pay for my monthly medications while also paying rent and food?
A lot of people have to cut their pills in half just to be able to get by.
There's a lot of people struggling across Wisconsin, and it's it really is time for candidates to pay attention to that.
If I may, for just a second.
Family caregivers, there's about 600,000 of them in Wisconsin.
These are folks who are raising their own families.
They have their own jobs, and they're helping out loved ones.
So that they can remain living in their own homes and communities as long as possible.
We call these the unsung heroes of Wisconsin.
They do things like helping loved ones with meal preparation and medication management, bill paying, transportation, bathing, sometimes driving, driving them to church, into the grocery store.
Without these family caregivers, which we refer to as the backbone of Wisconsin's long term care system, it would the whole system would fall apart.
Obviously, there will always be a need for assisted living and for nursing homes, but family caregivers are the heroes of Wisconsin.
And as the state gets older, AARP believes that the state should do more to support this group.
>> What kind of supports for allowing people to live independently at home would get older?
People's vote.
>> That's a great question, and at the state level, we AARP is advancing an idea called a caregiver tax credit.
The governor has had it in his last two budgets, but it's been removed later in the process by the Joint Finance Committee.
This would be a $500 income tax credit that would go to family caregivers, and it could help offset some of the costs that they incur while providing this care.
Family caregivers spend about $7,000 a year out of their own pocket to help their loved ones remain in their homes.
This tax credit can help them with costs such as, you know, putting in a handicap ramp or a Schauer bar, or any costs that they incur while providing care for a loved one.
They could write this off to a up to $500, and we think that this is something the state legislature really needs to look at.
>> So meanwhile, heading into Election Day, how are seniors faring in Wisconsin right now?
>> Well, like I say, some, you know, many, many are struggling wi, AARP Wisconsin, we're the state office of a huge national office and we go all over the state.
So we go to we host events at fairs.
We are at the Iowa Car Show we've been at in La Crosse, Madison, Kenosha.
And folks are telling us, you know, they're struggling.
They really want candidates to listen to their concerns and a lot of most of them are pocketbook issues.
They are concerned about the economy, utility rates rising without them having a say in it.
They want to be able to have somebody who has their back.
And that's what these candidates can provide is saying, you know, we understand the struggles that you are going through as an older wisconsinite and we've got your back and you know, you don't have to talk to AARP.
You can talk to anyone on the street to know that Wisconsin is getting older.
More and more baby boomers are retiring every going to have an older state and we've got to do things to support them.
Some things like making sure we have high speed internet in every community across the state, that is no longer a luxury.
It is a requirement.
Folks who aren't close to hospital systems or clinics, they rely on telehealth.
So that's how they're that's how they can communicate with their doctors.
It it mitigates social isolation so that these folks can talk to loved ones.
Broadband expansion is huge for Wisconsin seniors, and it's something that needs to be addressed.
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