Albany Times Union

Early voting over, record 3M cast ballots

Election Tuesday to decide victors in two Georgia races

- By Mark Niesse Atlanta

A record 3 million Georgia voters cast their ballots before early voting ended for the U.S. Senate runoffs, setting up a showdown that will be decided on election day Tuesday.

The high turnout so far reflects the national importance of the dual runoffs, which will determine control of the Senate. Republican U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue face Democratic challenger­s Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff.

No votes will be counted until polls close at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, but state election data analyzed by The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution indicate more ballots have been cast so far by groups and in areas that tend to favor Democrats.

Turnout lagged in rural, conservati­ve congressio­nal districts through Thursday, especially in northwest Georgia where President Donald Trump plans to rally voters on Monday.

Meanwhile, Black voters, who generally support Democrats, made up a higher portion of voters so far than in the presidenti­al election.

But Republican­s could make up ground with a strong showing on election day, as in the general election. For example, Trump and Perdue each won about 60 percent of in-person votes cast on Nov. 3. Loeffler also benefited from election day voting in the 20-candidate Senate special election.

The 3 million early votes cast so far have already shattered the previous record for total turnout in a Georgia runoff set in 2008, when 2.1 million people participat­ed in a U.S. Senate runoff between Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Democrat Jim Martin.

Hundreds of thousands more ballots are likely to be cast on Tuesday. During the presidenti­al election, nearly 1 million Georgians voted on Election Day. Total turnout reached 5 million. Trump and President-elect Joe Biden are both coming to Georgia Monday to push election day voting.

Early voting turnout for the runoff approached presidenti­al levels. About 77 percent as many voters participat­ed in the runoff during three weeks of early voting.

Turnout stayed strong during this holiday week, with more than 150,000 people casting in-person votes each day, similar to the pace seen in the final days of early voting before the general election.

The heaviest turnout came in areas that lean Democratic and embrace early and absentee voting, including the 6th and 4th congressio­nal district in metro Atlanta.

While turnout in rural areas was generally lower than the rest of the state, some populated counties like Chatham and Richmond also had subpar early voting numbers.

By race, election data show that Black voters have outperform­ed their share of the electorate. About 31 percent of voters in the runoff so far identified themselves as Black compared to 27 percent in the general election. Overall, Black voters make up 30 percent of the state’s registered voters.

White voters are also turning out, accounting for 56 percent of runoff voters, higher than their 53 percent of registered voters.

An influx of new voters will also influence the outcome of the runoffs. Over 114,000 voters who didn’t participat­e in the general election have cast ballots in the runoffs. Those voters are more racially diverse than the state’s electorate as a whole - 37 percent Black and 43 percent white.

Of voters who have participat­ed in both the primary and the runoffs, Democrats hold an advantage going into election day.

About 57 percent of runoff voters who also voted in last June’s primary requested Democratic ballots. About 41 percent pulled Republican Party ballots. One-third of runoff voters didn’t participat­e in the primary.

 ?? Alyssa Pointer / Associated Press ?? Fulton County elections workers work with voters during early voting in the state's runoff election at Chastain Park Gymnasium in Atlanta. Democratic candidates Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock are trying to to unseat Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler in the runoff elections that will determine which party controls the Senate.
Alyssa Pointer / Associated Press Fulton County elections workers work with voters during early voting in the state's runoff election at Chastain Park Gymnasium in Atlanta. Democratic candidates Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock are trying to to unseat Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler in the runoff elections that will determine which party controls the Senate.

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