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1. Persons who voted in Parliamentary elections 2019

This review examines persons entitled to vote and those who voted in the Parliamentary elections 2019 according to various background factors. The data on persons entitled to vote and those who voted derive from the voting register of the Election Information System of the Ministry of Justice. The unit-level background data are based on Statistics Finland’s data, such as population, employment and family statistics, and the Register of Completed Education and Degrees. The groups under examination are, on the one hand, all persons entitled to vote in the Parliamentary elections 2019 and advance voters and, on the other hand, persons entitled to vote and those who voted in voting districts where an electronic voting register was in use in the Parliamentary elections 2019.

The electronic voting register enables examination of voting turnout also in terms of votes cast on the election day. These data provide a complete picture of voting turnout as they can reliably help take into account those who did not vote. This is not possible for the data containing only advance voters. In this review, advance voters refer to all persons that voted in advance throughout the country and all who voted refer to both advance voters and those who voted on the election day in the above-mentioned districts.

It should be noted that the data presented in the review concerning all who voted do not cover the entire country or all persons entitled to vote. In this review, all who voted refer to the actual event of voting in those districts on which data were available. The data presented in this review have not been edited in any way, for example, by weighting the data based on background factors, but the breakdowns are presented as they are in the data. In other words, the data presented on all who voted in a particular area only apply to the municipalities, voting districts and persons entitled to vote for which data were available.

Analysed data

When examining the analyses of the review it should be noted that the analyses include two separate but partly overlapping voter groups. The following terms are used for these voter groups in the text, tables and figures of the review:

  1. Advance voters that cover all persons who voted in advance in the Parliamentary elections throughout the country

  2. All who voted in the areas that cover both advance voters and persons who voted on the election day (that is, all who voted) in the voting districts that used the electronic voting register

The voter groups used in the review are not mutually exclusive. The advance voters of the entire country also include the persons entitled to vote who voted in advance in the above-mentioned areas. All who voted in the areas also include all persons that voted in advance in those particular areas. Thus, the group “advance voters” depicts, just like the name suggests, persons entitled to vote who voted in advance in the entire country, and the group “all who voted in the areas” covers persons who voted on the election day and in advance in a limited number of voting districts.

The data of the review are limited to persons entitled to vote living in Finland. There were 4,255,466 persons entitled to vote resident in Finland in the Parliamentary elections 2019. Of these persons entitled to vote, 1,555,387, or 36.6 per cent of all persons entitled to vote, voted in advance. The voting districts where data on voting on the actual election day are available had 1,784,596 persons entitled to vote. So, complete voting data are available for 41.9 per cent of persons entitled to vote.

All unit-level background data cannot be linked to all persons entitled to vote. It should be noted that in terms of background variables used in an individual analysis the numbers of persons entitled to vote can be lower than the above-mentioned numbers. In practice, this is visible, for example, in that the distributions presented in the figures and tables may vary slightly by background variable.

Data coverage

The voting districts and municipalities for which all voting data were received are not divided entirely equally on the level of the whole country. Data on voting on the actual election day were available from 141 municipalities, from 88 municipalities completely, that is, from all voting districts and for 53 municipalities from some of the voting districts.

Voting data from the election day were available from all Mainland Finland constituencies. However, the coverage of the data varies by constituency. The most comprehensive data were available from the constituency of Central Finland, 83.0 per cent of persons entitled to vote in the constituency. Data were also more comprehensive than for the entire country in the constituencies of Oulu (74.6% of persons entitled to vote), Lapland (70.7%), Pirkanmaa (59.6%), Uusimaa (48.1%) and Satakunta (48.0%). The coverage for election day voting data was lowest in the Helsinki constituency where data were available only for two voting districts and for 1.4 per cent of persons entitled to vote. In other words, the Helsinki constituency is clearly under-represented in the available data. (See Appendix table 1)

Appendix table 2 examines the background factors of persons entitled to vote in the entire country and in the areas with complete voting data. In the Parliamentary elections 2019, the average age of persons entitled to vote was 51.0. In this respect, the persons entitled to vote in certain areas do not considerably differ from those entitled to vote in the entire country. Of all persons entitled to vote, men represented 48.6 per cent in the whole country, as many as in the areas in relative terms.

The median for the disposable income of persons entitled to vote in the whole country was slightly higher than that of persons entitled to vote in the areas. The difference is around EUR 300 per year.

As regards the level of education, the examined areas do not essentially differ from the whole country. In the whole country, persons entitled to vote were, on average, slightly more highly educated than in the examined areas with the electronic voting register. The difference is, in practice, only visible in the highest examined group of education. There were 1.2 percentage points more persons with higher tertiary level or doctorate level education in the whole country than in the areas. As regards education, the under-representation of the constituency of Helsinki, and, e.g. Turku and Espoo missing from the data, affects the distributions of the data.

Differences between all persons entitled to vote and persons entitled to vote living in the areas are small when it comes to main type of activity categories. There were slightly more employed persons (0.5 percentage points) in the whole country than in the areas and correspondingly, the areas had more students (0.5 percentage points). In turn, the number of pensioners was, in relative terms, equal in the areas and in the whole country.

There were slightly more Finnish-speaking persons entitled to vote in the areas (1.7 percentage points) than in the whole country. There are some differences in parties’ support in the Parliamentary elections 2019 between the areas and the whole country. Support for the Centre Party of Finland, the Finns Party and the Social Democratic Party was slightly higher in the areas than in the whole country. Correspondingly, support for the Coalition Party and the Green League was lower in the areas than in the whole country. There were no significant differences in the support of other parties between the areas and the whole country.

The factors presented in this Section and in Appendix tables 1 and 2 should be considered if the data obtained on all who voted in the areas with an electronic voting register are to be generalised to relate to all persons entitled to vote.

Age and sex

In the Parliamentary elections 2019, a total of 1,555,387 persons entitled to vote resident in Finland voted in advance, which represents 36.6 per cent of all persons entitled to vote living in Finland. The advance voting percentage reported by Statistics Finland is 50.7. The advance voting percentage is derived by calculating the share of advance voters among those having voted. In this review, persons who voted are examined in relation to persons entitled to vote, so the percentages given are lower than the advance voting percentage.

In the voting districts where all voting data were available, a total of 1,274,170 persons entitled to vote cast their vote, which was 71.4 per cent of the persons entitled to vote in the areas. In these areas, 52.1 per cent of persons entitled to vote voted in advance and 47.9 per cent voted on the election day.

Age clearly has an impact on voting. The share of advance voters in the whole country among persons entitled to vote exceeds 30 per cent at the age of 51, after which the share grows faster than earlier. Advance voting was most common among persons aged 75, of whom 57.4 per cent voted in advance. The share of advance voters falls under 30 per cent among persons aged 93. (Figure 1.)

Figure 1. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by age in the Parliamentary election 2019, %

Figure 1. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by age in the Parliamentary election 2019, %

The share of all who voted among persons entitled to vote in those voting districts where voting data on the election day were also obtained gives a more comprehensive picture of the phenomena than advance voting. The voting percentage of persons aged 18 was 59.5 per cent in these areas in the Parliamentary elections 2019. The voting percentage drops to 52.7 per cent in the group of persons aged 20. After this, the voting percentage grows fairly evenly to 74.7 per cent in the age group of those aged 43, after which the growth is slower. The voting percentage is at its highest in the group of persons aged 71 (82.5 %). For persons aged over 76, the voting percentage drops below 80 per cent, and for those aged 88 the level is below that of persons aged 20. (Figure 1.)

Women voted more actively than men in advance both in the whole country and in the areas, apart from the oldest examined age group. In the whole country, 38.6 per cent of women entitled to vote voted in advance, good four percentage points more than men.

The voting percentage that takes into account all persons who voted is also higher for women. In the areas, 72.6 per cent of women voted, which was 2.5 percentage points higher than for men. Examined by age group, women voted more actively than men in all age groups except for persons aged 75 or over. The biggest difference in voting activity between the sexes was found in the youngest age groups. Both for those aged 18 to 19 and 20 to 24, the voting turnout for women was more than ten percentage points higher than for men. (Table 1)

Table 1. Share of advance voters and all who voted among persons entitled to vote by sex and age in Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Age
group
Total Men Women
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Total 36.5 71.4 34.3 70.1 38.6 72.6
18-19 20.8 56.3 16.2 51.1 25.6 61.6
20-24 27.0 54.8 21.9 49.8 32.4 60.2
25-34 26.8 62.9 24.8 60.0 29.0 66.1
35-44 25.5 71.7 24.7 69.8 26.4 73.8
45-54 30.0 74.9 28.6 73.5 31.5 76.3
55-64 41.6 78.7 39.3 77.6 43.9 79.6
65-74 54.5 82.0 52.5 81.7 56.2 82.3
75- 48.6 67.5 51.6 73.6 46.6 63.6

Main type of activity, education and family status

Measured by main type of activity, employed persons voted most actively in advance in the whole country, making up 44.6 per cent of all advance voters. The number of pensioners was almost the same among advance voters (43.0 per cent). Among advance voters, the number of employed persons was lower and that of pensioners higher than among all persons entitled to vote. In other groups of main type of activity, the share of advance voters was relatively smaller than among all persons entitled to vote. (Figure 2.)

Among all employed and pensioners who voted, the share of the group was bigger than the corresponding share of the groups among all persons entitled to vote. By contrast, the share of those who voted belonging to the unemployed, students or other main type of activity in the areas was below the relative size of the groups among all persons entitled to vote. (Figure 3.)

Figure 2. Persons entitled to vote and advance voters in the whole country by main type of activity in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 2. Persons entitled to vote and advance voters in the whole country by main type of activity in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 3. Persons entitled to vote and all who voted in the areas by main type of activity in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 3. Persons entitled to vote and all who voted in the areas by main type of activity in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

High education increases the probability of voting. Persons entitled to vote with lowest tertiary or higher education voted in advance more than average in the Parliamentary elections. This is also clearly visible for all who voted in the areas, the voting percentage of persons with higher tertiary or doctorate level education was 19.7 percentage points higher than among all persons entitled to vote and 33.2 percentage points higher than among all persons entitled to vote with only basic level qualifications.

The connection of age to voting turnout is also visible in the educational groups as, in nearly all of them, voting activity grows with age, apart from the oldest age group. Voting turnout of over 90 per cent is attained among those aged 45 to 54 with at least higher tertiary education and those aged 65 to 74 with lowest level tertiary and lower university level degrees. (Table 2)

When interpreting Table 2 it should be noted that lowest tertiary level qualifications decrease in the population and no new qualifications are completed in Finland in this category, so the age structure of the educational group differs clearly from other groups. Lowest tertiary level education covers qualifications above upper secondary level that are not university of applied sciences degrees.

Table 2. Share of advance voters and all who voted among persons entitled to vote by age and level of education in Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Total Lower
secondary
Upper
secondary
Lowest
tertiary
Lower
tertiary
Higher
tertiary,
doctorate
Total Advance
voters,
whole
country
36.5 33.2 33.8 47.5 38.5 42.9
All
who
voted,
areas
71.4 57.9 68.0 85.2 83.4 91.1
18-24 Advance
voters,
whole
country
25.3 18.9 29.6 .. 48.5 ..
All
who
voted,
areas
55.2 49.5 58.9 .. 80.2 ..
25-34 Advance
voters,
whole
country
26.8 13.1 22.7 19.2 36.2 43.0
All
who
voted,
areas
62.9 33.6 58.0 42.6 79.9 89.0
35-44 Advance
voters,
whole
country
25.5 16.3 22.5 26.9 28.6 32.9
All
who
voted,
areas
71.7 43.6 64.6 77.7 81.8 89.7
45-54 Advance
voters,
whole
country
30.0 21.2 28.3 33.3 32.6 35.6
All
who
voted,
areas
74.9 51.1 69.4 82.4 84.7 91.3
55-64 Advance
voters,
whole
country
41.6 33.1 40.3 46.7 46.4 47.7
All
who
voted,
areas
78.7 62.9 75.8 86.5 89.1 92.8
65-74 Advance
voters,
whole
country
54.5 47.9 54.2 62.0 62.2 62.6
All
who
voted,
areas
82.0 73.8 81.7 90.1 92.3 94.4
75- Advance
voters,
whole
country
48.6 42.3 51.6 61.2 62.8 65.8
All
who
voted,
areas
67.5 60.0 72.3 81.8 84.0 88.6

The family status of persons who voted is examined by means of limited family status groups. Attention is paid to married or cohabiting couples (partnerships) and those without a family, the number of children and the age of persons entitled to vote.

Those in partnerships voted in the areas clearly more than those without a family, the voting percentage of married or cohabiting couples was over 16 percentage points higher than that of those without a family. The age of children does not have a significant effect on the voting turnout of those in partnerships. In turn, the voting turnout of parents of one-parent families remained at 61.1 per cent.

When examining the voting turnout of young people aged 18 to 24, we can see that the voting turnout of those living at home (with their parents) was higher than of those of the same age not belonging to families. Those not belonging to a family include both those living alone and with another person or other persons. The difference in the groups’ voting turnout in the areas was around four percentage points.

An age group specific examination of all who voted does not significantly change the picture of the effect of family status. As a rule, the voting percentage grows in all family status groups by age, apart from the oldest age group of people aged 75 and over. For the family status, the group “Other” includes those aged over 24 living at home, parents of one-parent families living with their adult child, the institutional population and unclassified persons and those whose family status is unknown. (Figure 4, Table 3)

Figure 4. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by age in certain family status groups in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 4. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by age in certain family status groups in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Table 3. Share of advance voters in the whole country and all who voted in the areas by family status in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Total Partner-
ship
Partner-
ship,
no
children
Partner-
ship,
children
aged
under 18
Partner-
ship,
no
children
aged
under 18
One-
parent
family,
children
aged
under 18
Without
a
family
Other
Total Advance
voters,
whole
country
36.6 37.7 45.4 24.3 37.9 24.8 38.8 30.3
All
voters,
areas
71.4 79.2 79.9 77.3 82.5 61.1 62.8 52.6
18-24 Advance
voters,
whole
country
25.3 25.1 26.7 14.5 .. 10.0 30.2 19.5
All
voters,
areas
55.2 57.8 59.4 46.8 .. 26.0 52.7 32.3
25-34 Advance
voters,
whole
country
26.8 25.8 30.2 21.0 .. 17.0 29.9 25.4
All
voters,
areas
62.9 69.5 71.2 67.7 .. 43.8 57.8 50.0
35-44 Advance
voters,
whole
country
25.5 24.4 29.3 23.3 23.5 23.8 30.0 27.1
All
voters,
areas
71.8 77.0 72.4 78.1 65.1 62.1 60.8 48.7
45-54 Advance
voters,
whole
country
30.1 28.9 32.7 26.6 30.2 29.5 33.5 31.3
All
voters,
areas
74.9 80.2 75.5 82.4 81.0 70.7 62.8 58.7
55-64 Advance
voters,
whole
country
41.7 42.1 44.2 32.8 38.4 34.8 41.7 37.4
All
voters,
areas
78.7 84.0 83.6 84.6 85.3 75.2 68.5 64.7
65-74 Advance
voters,
whole
country
54.5 56.6 57.2 42.8 49.7 42.8 51.2 43.0
All
voters,
areas
82.0 87.0 87.2 85.9 84.4 82.4 73.3 61.3
75- Advance
voters,
whole
country
48.6 55.0 55.5 .. 46.1 .. 44.5 27.1
All
voters,
areas
67.5 78.4 78.8 .. 71.4 .. 59.9 36.4

Income level and occupation

The income level of those who voted, and persons entitled to vote is examined with the help of disposable monetary income. Income data derive from the latest taxation data from 2017. Disposable monetary income refers to monetary income after taxes. These consist of earned income, property income, benefits in kind and transfer income.

In the data of the review, the income of persons entitled to vote is divided into deciles. Income deciles are derived by arranging persons entitled to vote by income and by dividing the group into ten equal parts. The groups formed in this way each have around 424,000 persons entitled to vote for all persons entitled to vote in the whole country. In the areas from which data were received on voting on the election day as well, the groups have around 178,000 persons entitled to vote each.

For the whole country, income data are missing for some 8,000 persons entitled to vote. In the data for areas containing election day votes, the income level was missing for some 2,500 persons entitled to vote. The median for the disposable income of all persons entitled to vote was EUR 21,500, in the examined areas the corresponding median income was EUR 21,200. The disposable income of persons entitled to vote in the whole country belonging to the highest income decile was at least EUR 39,656 and in the examined areas it was EUR 38,413 per year. The income for those belonging to the lowest income decile was at most EUR 9,356 for persons entitled to vote in the whole country and EUR 9,249 per year in the areas. (Table 4)

Table 4. Lowest limits for the income deciles of persons entitled to vote in 2019, EUR

Decile All persons
entitled to vote
Persons
entitled to vote
in areas
1st decile 0 0
2nd decile 9,357 9,250
3rd decile 13,136 13,068
4th decile 15,724 15,600
5th decile 18,439 18,210
6th decile 21,491 21,173
7th decile 24,549 24,189
8th decile 27,735 27,291
9th decile 31,980 31,337
10th decile 39,656 38,413

On the level of the whole country, the level of income as a whole does not have much effect on advance voting. In the lowest income decile, advance voting is relatively lower than in the higher income brackets. Starting from the second income decile, there are no major changes in the rate of advance voting, the share of advance voting in these categories varies from 35.2 to 41.1 per cent of persons entitled to vote. (Figure 5.)

When examining all who voted in the areas, the effect of income on voting turnout is considerably more evident. As a rule, voting is more common in higher income groups than in lower income groups. In all, 87.1 per cent of those belonging to the highest income decile voted. By contrast, the voting turnout remained at 57.7 per cent in the lowest income decile. Thus, the difference between the voting turnout of the lowest and highest income earners was over 29 percentage points. (Figure 5.)

Figure 5. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by income decile in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 5. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by income decile in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

The occupations of those entitled to vote is examined with the Classification of Occupations. The occupation data used is from 2016. The occupation is determined on the last day of the year for persons who, based on their main type of activity, are employed. The occupation data for those entitled to vote in the 2019 Parliamentary elections is available for around 2,100,000 persons entitled to vote. In the examined areas, the corresponding data is available for some 870,000 persons entitled to vote.

The voting turnout for all persons entitled to vote for whom occupation data is available in the examined areas was 75.8 per cent. Among occupational groups, professionals had the highest voting turnaround, 88.9 per cent. The 80 per cent level was also exceeded by managers, armed forces personnel, technicians and associate professionals, as well as skilled agricultural, forestry and fishery workers. The voting turnout was lower than average in different employee groups. (Figure 6.)

Measured by occupational group, voting turnout was lowest in elementary occupations, where voting turnout was 61.8 per cent, which is 14 percentage points below the average of occupational groups. The elementary occupations group includes auxiliary, routine-like jobs that require only little education.

Figure 6. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by occupational group in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 6. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by occupational group in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Foreign background

The background of persons entitled to vote and persons who voted is viewed by means of language and origin. Voting turnout for persons with national languages as their native language was higher among those who voted in the areas than for all persons entitled to vote. In the areas, 0.4 percentage points more of Finnish and Sami speakers and 7.4 percentage points more of Swedish speakers voted compared to all persons entitled to vote.

In the Parliamentary elections, the right to vote is tied to nationality, that is, there are fewer persons speaking other than national language as their native language entitled to vote than in the Municipal elections, for example. Of all persons entitled to vote, 92.2 per cent were Finnish-speaking, 5.3 per cent Swedish-speaking and 2.5 per cent other language speakers. In the areas for which data were available for all who voted, 93.9 per cent spoke Finnish as their native language, 4.1 per cent Swedish and 2.0 per cent other languages. The share of Sami speakers was 0.03 per cent in both cases.

Table 5. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by sex and language in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Sex Total Finnish,
Sami
Swedish Other
language
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
areas
Total 36.5 71.4 37.3 71.8 32.5 78.8 16.1 40.0
Men 34.3 70.1 35.1 70.4 29.9 77.4 16.2 39.6
Women 38.6 72.6 39.5 73.0 35.1 80.1 16.1 40.3

The voting turnout of foreign-language speakers was clearly lower than for those speaking national languages. Of all foreign-language speakers entitled to vote in the whole country, 16.1 per cent voted in advance. Correspondingly, among all who voted in the areas, 40.0 per cent of foreign-language speakers voted, which was 31 percentage points fewer than for all persons entitled to vote. (Table 5)

A more detailed examination of the voting turnout of different language groups shows that the highest voting percentage among all votes cast in the areas was found among Swedish speakers (78.8%). Correspondingly, the voting percentage of Finnish and Sami speakers was 71.8 per cent. Figure 7 includes the largest language groups measured by absolute numbers in the areas for which data were also available for election day voting. With this limitation, the voting percentage of foreign-language speakers was highest for German speakers, 74.5 per cent of persons entitled to vote. For other foreign-language speaking groups, English, Spanish, Somali and Estonian speakers’ voting turnout exceeded 50 per cent. (Figure 7.)

Figure 7. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by language group in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Figure 7. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by language group in the Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Examined by age group and origin, young people’s voting turnout was lower than in older age groups both among persons of Finnish background and of foreign background. This is visible both among advance voters in the whole country and all who voted in the areas. For all who voted in the areas, the difference between voting turnout among persons of Finnish and foreign background was nearly 31 percentage points. The voting turnout of persons with foreign background remains under 35 per cent in the 18 to 34 age groups. Over one-half of persons with foreign background only voted in the age group of 65 or over. (Table 6)

Table 6. Share of those who voted among persons entitled to vote by origin and age in Parliamentary elections 2019, %

Age
group
Total
population
Persons with
Finnish
background
Persons with
foreign
background
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
in areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
in areas
Advance
voters,
whole
country
All
who
voted,
in areas
Total 36.5 71.4 37.1 72.0 17.0 41.2
18-24 25.3 55.2 25.8 55.9 12.8 30.0
25-34 26.8 62.9 27.3 63.8 13.4 33.6
35-44 25.5 71.7 26.0 72.8 13.3 39.3
45-54 30.0 74.9 30.5 75.6 15.7 44.9
55-64 41.6 78.7 42.1 79.1 20.8 48.4
65-74 54.5 82.0 54.7 82.2 31.4 59.8
75- 48.6 67.5 48.7 67.6 37.4 57.1

Source: Parliamentary elections 2019, review of voting in the Parliamentary elections, Statistics Finland

Inquiries: Sami Fredriksson 029 551 2696, vaalit@stat.fi

Director in charge: Jari Tarkoma


Updated 24.5.2019

Referencing instructions:

Official Statistics of Finland (OSF): Parliamentary elections [e-publication].
ISSN=1799-6279. Background analysis of voters 2019, 1. Persons who voted in Parliamentary elections 2019 . Helsinki: Statistics Finland [referred: 22.11.2024].
Access method: http://www.stat.fi/til/evaa/2019/03/evaa_2019_03_2019-05-24_kat_001_en.html