Dayton Daily News

Early voting interest high in some battlegrou­nd states

Advance voting could account for 40 percent of total.

- By Hope Yen

More people WASHINGTON — are seeking or casting early ballots in the critical states of North Carolina and Florida than at this point in 2012, with Hillary Clinton the likely benefactor, as early voting shows signs of surging nationwide.

Clinton may also benefit from an increase in ballot requests in Georgia, a traditiona­lly Republican state where Democrats have made inroads. But Donald Trump is showing signs of strength in Iowa and parts of Maine, states won by Barack Obama in the last two presidenti­al elections.

The latest snapshot of ballot data offers a glimpse into a key question: How much of a vote advantage can Clinton run up before Election Day, Nov. 8, when more Republican­s tend to vote? Traditiona­lly Republican­s have done better initially with early mail-in ballots, before Democrats surpass them once in-person early voting begins. While the ballot sample to date remains small, Clinton so far is hitting guideposts in several battlegrou­nd states compared to 2008 and 2012.

Though preliminar­y, data suggest that advance voting could reach 40 percent of all votes cast nationally — up from 35 percent in 2012. It may also indicate a higher overall turnout in an election that has generated enormous public interest despite — or because of — the unpopulari­ty of both major party candidates.

In Ohio, nearly 806,000 voters have submitted absentee ballot applicatio­ns. That’s up from nearly 723,000 during a similar period in 2012, when a record 1.87 million early ballots ultimately were cast by mail and in person.

In Greensboro, N.C., Brandon Starkes, 28, cited the state’s unsuccessf­ul bid to impose a voter ID law in his decision to vote early. The law was struck down as racially discrimina­tory.

“I want to make sure I don’t have to deal with issues at the polls on Election Day,” said Starkes, who plans to vote for Clinton.

In-person early voting begins today in Iowa, while Florida, Arizona and New Hampshire mail out ballots beginning early next month.

In North Carolina, a mustwin state for Trump, more than 69,150 ballots have been requested and 8,541 have been returned. That’s up from 8,326 ballots returned during a similar period in 2012.

By party, Democrats made up 40 percent of the ballots returned compared to 35 percent for Republican­s. At this point in 2012, Republican­s had opened a wide lead over Democrats in returned ballots, 49 percent to 32 percent, leading to Mitt Romney’s narrow win in the state. While Romney was boosted by older whites who voted early by mail, white voters so far have been down this year, to 82 percent from 86 percent of submitted ballots. Black voters, more likely to cast ballots in person, were higher at 12 percent.

“Voters appear to be listening and changing behavior in reaction to changes in laws,” said Michael McDonald, a University of Florida professor who runs the U.S. Election Project.

Florida doesn’t start absentee balloting until Tuesday, but already a record 2.5 million voters have requested ballots. Republican­s are ahead in ballot requests, 43 percent to 38 percent.

That’s a much narrower gap than in 2008, the most recent in which comparable data was available. At that time, the Republican­s held a solid lead in requests, 51 percent to 32 percent, according to data analyzed by Catalist, a Democratic firm that helped run data operations for Obama’s 2008 race. Obama won the state by 2.8 percentage points.

The 2016 improvemen­t can’t be wholly attributed to fresh Democratic enthusiasm. A change in Florida’s laws meant that voters in 2014 who requested absentee ballots could automatica­lly receive them this year. Still, Democrats welcomed early gains.

Elsewhere, Republican­s showed promise.

In Iowa, Democratic requests for ballots continued to outpace Republican­s, 63,880 to 24,700. Despite the 3 to 1 advantage, that’s a drop from 2012, when Democrats at this point led 119,318 to 24,909. Clinton plans to visit the state today as early voting begins.

“Democrats need to run up the score in Iowa, and so far they are not,” said Lindsay Walters, spokeswoma­n for the Republican National Committee.

In Maine’s rural 2nd Congressio­nal District, requests for ballots are down 18 percent, mostly among Democrats. Trump is counting on that district’s one electoral vote as part of his narrow path to the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency. If he succeeds, he would be the first Republican since 1992 to win the district in the mostly Democratic state. Maine and Nebraska are the only states that allocate electoral votes by congressio­nal district.

In Georgia, the state does not provide breakdowns of ballots by party, but overall ballot requests are up 5 percent to 82,504.

By race, requests for ballots by whites rose to 62,732 while those from blacks were down slightly to 16,937, according to Catalist’s analysis. However, Asian-Americans, who in recent elections have leaned Democratic, nearly doubled to 1,588. Hispanics were lower at 761.

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