A state-level analysis of the 2020 and 2024 U.S. presidential elections reveals a distinct correlation between the Democratic popular vote share and average electricity prices in corresponding states.
The data indicates that as the cost of powering homes and businesses rose, the incumbent party’s vote share in that state also increased.
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On the other hand, an inverse correlation was observed for nation-wide data; between 2020 and 2024, the Democratic candidate’s share of the popular vote declined by approximately 2.99 percentage points (from 51.31% to 48.32%).
During this same period, the national average price of electricity for all sectors rose by approximately 22%, from 10.59 cents/kWh in 2020 to a projected 12.94 cents/kWh in 2024.
| Metric | 2020 Value | 2024 Value | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic Popular Vote Share | 51.31% (Joe Biden) | 48.32% (Kamala Harris) | -2.99 pp |
| Avg Electricity Price (All Sectors) | 10.59 cents/kWh | 12.94 cents/kWh | +22% |
| Avg Residential Price | 13.01 cents/kWh | 16.48 cents/kWh | +27% |
The 2024 election occurred in a challenging macroeconomic environment.
While electricity prices surged, they were part of a broader inflationary narrative.
Exit polls showed widespread voter concern, with three-quarters of voters reporting hardship due to inflation.
Sector-Specific Price Trends ($/kWh)
Retail electricity prices have risen consistently across all sectors, but the residential sector has seen the most dramatic escalation.
| Year | All Sectors | Residential | Commercial | Industrial |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 10.27 | 12.55 | 10.43 | 6.76 |
| 2019 | 10.54 | 13.01 | 10.68 | 6.81 |
| 2020 | 10.59 | 13.15 | 10.59 | 6.67 |
| 2023 | 12.68 | 16.00 | 12.59 | 8.04 |
| 2024 (Proj) | 12.94 | 16.48 | 12.75 | 8.13 |
| 2025 (Proj) | 13.51 | 17.16 | 13.33 | 8.51 |
Residential prices increased by approximately 3.5 cents/kWh between 2019 and 2024, representing a 27% nominal increase.
Primary Cost Drivers
- Natural Gas Volatility: Fluctuations in fuel costs, particularly natural gas, were a primary driver. The generation-related portion of retail prices typically lags changes in wholesale spot prices. For example, in Florida, natural gas price increases added approximately 2 cents/kWh to residential prices between 2020 and 2023.
- Utility Capital Expenditures (Capex): Utilities invested heavily in modernizing the grid, with spending on distribution networks often exceeding generation and transmission. These costs are recovered through rates approved by state Public Utility Commissions (PUCs), directly raising the delivery portion of bills.
- Transmission & Distribution (T&D): Investments to harden the grid against extreme weather and integrate distributed resources pushed up delivery charges. Revenue per kWh increased across 44 states in late 2025, reflecting these systemic cost pressures.
- Extreme Weather: Events like Winter Storm Uri and wildfires in the West necessitated costly repairs and mitigation strategies. In California, wildfire mitigation is a significant component of the high retail rates.
2024 Residential Price Extremes
The Pacific region and the Northeast face the highest absolute costs, while the Midwest and South remain relatively affordable.
| State | Region | 2024 Price (cents/kWh) | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hawaii | Pacific | 36.11 | Highest in nation; isolated grid |
| California | Pacific | 27.85 | Wildfire mitigation, high gas costs |
| Connecticut | New England | 25.52 | Regional transmission constraints |
| Louisiana | South | 8.71 | Low cost; proximity to fuel sources |
| North Dakota | Midwest | 7.69 | Lowest in nation |
Data Sources
The following authoritative sources have been identified to construct the necessary dataset for this analysis.
| Data Category | Source | Specifics |
|---|---|---|
| Electricity Prices | EIA.gov | Electric Power Monthly, Electric Sales, Revenue, and Average Price (Form EIA-861) |
| Election Results | FEC / MIT Lab | Certified state-level popular vote totals (2020, 2024) |
| Inflation/Labor | BLS | CPI-U, Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS) |
| Demographics | Census Bureau | American Community Survey (ACS) for income, education |
| Energy Burden | DOE / LEAD Tool | Low-income vs. non-low-income burden metrics |
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