November 6, 2024
Getting the vote out has gone virtual, with one Wisconsin woman detailing how she and others are using online dating applications to help raise turnout among young people.
Getting the vote out has gone virtual, with one Wisconsin woman detailing how she and others are using online dating applications to help raise turnout among young people.



A Wisconsin woman is using online dating applications to reach young people nationwide and help raise voter turnout during elections, according to a local report.

Kristi Johnston is part of Next Gen. America, an organization that works toward increasing voter turnout among young Americans, WKOW-TV reported.

Johnston and the group do not push for any specific political party or candidate and instead raise awareness and remind people to get out and vote.


“We’re about getting young people to vote across the board,” she told the station.

CONSERVATIVES PICK UP LANDSLIDE POLICY VICTORIES IN WISCONSIN ELECTION DESPITE SUPREME COURT LOSS TO LIBERALS

Johnston said that she and her colleagues began organizing around dating apps beginning in 2020, when they were forced to take their operation virtual due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“We see that a lot of young people are still on Tinder, on Hinge, on Bumble, so we wanted to make sure that we were covering all of our bases and meeting people in every space that we could,” Johnston said.

GOP REP. DAN KNODL WINS OPEN WISCONSIN SENATE SEAT, CREATING REPUBLICAN SUPERMAJORITY IN THE CHAMBER

The Wisconsin Supreme Court election held Tuesday broke the record for voter turnout during a spring election not coinciding with a presidential race.

Over 36% of eligible Wisconsin voters participated in the highly anticipated election, surpassing the previous high of 34% set in the 2011 state Supreme Court race. 

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Democratic-backed Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Janet Protasiewicz won the crucial seat, defeating Republican-backed former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Dan Kelly. 

The court will now be controlled 4-3 by left-leaning justices for at least the next two years. During that time, the court is expected to decide on a pending lawsuit challenging the state’s 1849 law banning abortion.

Fox News’ Timothy H.J. Nerozzi contributed to this report.

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