Hi, Jessica,
The good news is your statement would indeed justify this conclusion! Given that...
- there was an increase in the percentage of registered voters who participated in the last election compared to the prior election;
...and that...
- there were more voters registered for the latest election than there had been for the prior election;
...we could correctly conclude that:
- More registered voters voted in the last election than in the priorelection.
However, the answer identified in the book is a statement that is slightly more limited but would be sufficient to justify the conclusion.
Given that "there was not a decrease in the number of registered voters between the two elections" and given that "a greater percentage of registered voters voted in the latest election than did in the prior election," we could conclude that "more registered voters voted in the last election than in the prior election."
Let's illustrate your answer by substituting hypothetical numbers:
- For the prior election, there were 100 voters.
- For the latest election, there were 200 voters.
- 45% of voters voted in the prior election.
- 50% of voters voted in the latest election.
- 45 voters voted in the prior election.
- 100 voters voted in the latest election.
- The conclusion is justified.
Now let's illustrate the book's answer:
- For the prior election, there were 100 voters.
- For the latest election, there were 100 voters.
- 45% of voters voted in the prior election.
- 50% of voters voted in the latest election.
- 45 voters voted in the prior election.
- 50 voters voted in the latest election.
- The conclusion is justified.
Thus, even though the solution the book offers is not as "strong" as yours, it is sufficient to justify the conclusion. In fact, because it is more limited and slightly more challenging to understand, the solution offered in the book is more likely to be analogous to what you might see on the LSAT.
I hope this helps!