Connecticut Post

State sees high voter registrati­on

- By Ana Radelat

Following a national trend, voter registrati­on continues to soar in Connecticu­t, especially among young people, who traditiona­lly have weak participat­ion in elections.

According to data from the Connecticu­t Secretary of the State’s office, from the 2016 election through the end of September, 103,436 new voters registered as Democrats, compared with 53,371 who registered as Republican­s.

But many more Connecticu­t residents — 168,090 — registered as unaffiliat­ed.

Although voter registrati­on in Connecticu­t has surged for all age groups, the biggest increase is among voters ages 18 to 25.

In the last midterm cycle, as of Oct. 10, 2014, only 7,960 Connecticu­t residents in that age bracket had registered to vote. As of Oct.10 of this year, 51,659 young voters had registered.

“It’s tremendous,” said Connecticu­t Secretary of the State Denise Merrill. “I feel like I’ve been waiting all my life for young people to turn out and now they have.”

More of those young people registered as Democrats (16,797), than Re- publicans (6,596). But more than half — 28,566 — of those new young voters registered as unaffiliat­ed.

The increase in voter registrati­on across the board is significan­t, analysts say. Since there’s no presidenti­al contest in a midterm election, the number of those signing up to vote in those cycles is usually depressed. That trend has been broken in Connecticu­t and

elsewhere across the nation.

Compared with the same period in the last mid-term election, new Democratic and Republican voter registrati­ons in Connecticu­t more than doubled — and unaffiliat­ed voter registrati­on tripled.

“Just in September, we had more than 20,000 registrati­ons,” said Merrill.

Voter registrati­on in Connecticu­t ends Oct. 30 and enrollment usually surges as that deadline draws near. This year is no different, with the pace of registrati­ons accelerati­ng even more since the beginning of the month. Connecticu­t also has Election Day registrati­on for those who meet the eligibilit­y requiremen­ts.

More than 5,600 new voter registrati­ons were processed in the first 10 days of the month, as the controvers­y over the confirmati­on of new Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh transfixed the nation and deepened its partisan divide.

In those 10 days, 2,312 voters registered as Democrats, 1,202 registered as Republican­s and 2,153 as unaffiliat­ed.

Merrill attributed the increase of voter registrati­ons to several factors. One is that Connecticu­t residents can now sign up to vote when they are at the Department of Motor vehicles and online.

An increase in social media campaigns aimed at registerin­g voters is also helping increase registrati­ons, Merrill said, as is increased politiciza­tion of the nation since President Donald Trump won the White House.

“The 2016 election seems to have galvanized voters,” Merrill said.

Connecticu­t is one of 19 states where Democrats are ahead of Republican­s when it comes to active registered voters. As of Oct. 10, there were 780,313 active Democratic voters registered in Connecticu­t, compared with 457,813 active registered Republican­s.

The number of unaffiliat­ed active voters, who usually split their votes between party candidates fairly evenly, was 862,466.

Although registered Democrats in Connecticu­t outnumber registered Republican­s, Democrats in the state turn out to vote “at a slightly lower percentage” than GOP voters, Merrill said.

The Connecticu­t Secretary of the State defines active voters as those who have voted in the last two federal elections. However, Connecticu­t residents are not removed from voting rolls until they are on the inactive list for four years, so many “inactive” voters can vote on Nov. 6.

The Taylor Swift factor

Raven Brooks, chief operating officer of Vote.org, a national voter registrati­on organizati­on, said national voter registrati­on by his group is at “record numbers,” exceeding registrati­ons in the 2016 presidenti­al election “and we are not even finished with October enrollment yet.”

“We’re breaking every record,” Brooks said.

He said 6,122 people in Connecticu­t signed up to vote through Vote.org this year — 2,718 in October alone.

Vote.org helps residents in states that allow online registrati­on by providing them with forms and instructio­ns, and those in states that don’t allow online voting by providing them a PDF of a registrati­on form they can fill in and mail to their registrars of voters.

In some states, the organizati­on faxes completed forms to registrars.

Raven attributes the new interest in registerin­g to vote this year to increased activity by voter registrati­on groups — and to celebritie­s like Taylor Swift who have taken to social media to boost enrollment, especially among younger voters.

“A lot of time, younger voters don’t find out about elections until much later than everybody else,” Raven said. “Then it’s often too late to register to vote.”

Swift’s Instagram post on Sunday urged her 112 million followers to register to vote on Vote.org and catapulted the generally apolitical singer into the fray of November’s midterms by endorsing two Tennessee Democrats.

Raven said his group registered 364,000 new voters, mostly 18 to 25 years old, within two days of that Instagram post.

“It’s tremendous. I feel like I’ve been waiting all my life for young people to turn out and now they have.”

Secretary of the State Denise Merrill

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Denise Merrill

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