Los Angeles Times

Early voters surge to polls

Many have already cast ballots, suggesting a record turnout

- BY EVAN HALPER AND MAYA SWEEDLER

WASHINGTON — Voters across the country have been crowding into polling places and mailing in ballots in numbers rarely seen in an off-year election, pointing toward a possible record turnout for Tuesday’s contest and leaving operatives from across the political spectrum trying to read tea leaves to figure out what it means.

In some states, more people are on track to cast ballots in early voting than in the entire election in 2014. In Texas, one such state, hundreds of thousands of new voters have already participat­ed. Democrats hope that surge indicates that their Senate candidate, Rep. Beto O’Rourke, may be succeeding in mobilizing a crucial demographi­c.

But Republican­s are also energized, turning out in larger numbers than Democrats so far in Florida, for example, where a cliff hanger of a race for governor features a Trump acolyte competing against an unabashed progressiv­e who would be the state’s first African American governor.

The picture in California is more status quo. The state has at least half a dozen hotly contested congressio­nal districts, which could play a big role in whether Democrats take back a majority in the U.S. House. But in the remaining districts, the lack of a close race at the top of the ticket is holding down turnout, said Paul Mitchell, vice president of Political Data, which compiles voter data in the state.

California was one of the country’s pioneers in widespread early voting, and at

this point, a large majority of voters get their ballots in the mail and either send them back or drop them at a polling station. Some 3 million ballots had been cast in the state by Friday.

Nationwide, as early voting was coming to a close in many states on Friday, more than 30 million ballots had already been cast. Turnout is hitting a pace closer to what’s typically seen in presidenti­al elections. It has the potential to be the highest in an off-year election since 1966.

“When you look at some of these states, the numbers are eye-popping,” said Michael McDonald, a political science professor at the University of Florida and one of the country’s leading experts on voting patterns.

Midterm elections typically draw far fewer voters than presidenti­al contests. In 2016, about 60% of votingelig­ible Americans cast ballots, according to McDonald’s compilatio­ns of state data. In 2014, only 37% voted — the lowest turnout in years. The trends so far indicate that close to half of those eligible will vote this time, McDonald estimates.

Because Democrats rely heavily on the votes of younger people and minorities, who are less consistent about voting than are older whites, their candidates usually benefit from a higher turnout.

As a result, Democrats hope that the numbers so far point to their much-ballyhooed blue wave, but they are reluctant to say as much. Misinterpr­etation of earlyvotin­g trends in 2016 helped land egg on a lot of faces after Donald Trump’s surprise victory.

Early-voting figures can easily mislead. States release a trove of data about who the voters are — informatio­n on their party affiliatio­ns, voting history, age and so on. But no one knows for which candidate those voters cast a ballot. Nor can anyone be sure whether people who vote early are simply the same voters who would have otherwise shown up on election day.

In Texas, both O’Rourke and incumbent Sen. Ted Cruz suggested the state’s huge early turnout would boost their campaigns. Texas is still a deeply conservati­ve place, and more voters coming to the polls can only mean more support for him, Cruz suggested in a CBS “60 Minutes” segment released Friday.

O’Rourke said much the same on the show: “The more people who show up, the better we do.”

The results Tuesday will reveal who is right. But one thing is clear: The numbers already are Texas-sized.

If current trends hold, some 3 million more people will vote this year in Texas than did during the last midterm, in 2014, said Tom Bonier, chief executive of TargetSmar­t, a Democratic data firm closely tracking early voting. “That’s amazing,” Bonier said.

The state is also drawing first-time voters to the polls. Already, Bonier said, more than 300,000 people who were eligible to vote in the 2016 presidenti­al election but did not show up that year have cast ballots in Texas.

“Texas is leading the way by a long shot in first-time voting,” Bonier said. “It is not nearly as much a factor in other states.”

In California’s seven most competitiv­e districts — all currently held by Republican­s — registered GOP voters have returned ballots at a slightly higher clip than registered Democrats. Of the approximat­ely 530,000 ballots returned, almost 193,000 came from registered Republican­s, compared with 177,000 from registered Democrats, according to Political Data.

How that translates into votes, however, remains a big question. Democrats expect to pick up votes in suburban districts from a significan­t number of Republican­s whose party affiliatio­n does not necessaril­y signal loyalty or approval of President Trump.

Turnout is trending highest in the four competitiv­e House districts in Orange County and north Los Angeles County. And there has been an uptick in younger, independen­t voters in coastal counties who didn’t participat­e in the primary. That’s likely a good sign for Democrats, Mitchell said. Such voters tend to be progressiv­e.

California is not the only state where younger voters are hitting the polls in force. In Georgia, voters younger than 30 have been casting early ballots at quadruple the rate they did in 2014. In Texas and Nevada, voting by young people is up fivefold. The rate is triple in Arizona, according to Target-Smart.

In Nevada, Democrats have built a small but persistent statewide lead in early votes, said Jon Ralston of the Nevada Independen­t, who closely tracks the state’s vote.

Some bellwether districts in the Midwest also have provided encouragin­g signs for Democrats. One is Iowa’s 1st Congressio­nal District, located in a swing region where voting analysts first started to notice a migration toward the GOP as early ballots were cast in the 2016 election.

Now, registered Democrats are showing back up in force. The party balance is 10 points more favorable to Democrats than it was at this point in 2016, McDonald said.

“These are huge changes,” he added. “It signals enthusiasm among Democrats and that Republican­s are not as engaged in these key swing districts they will need.”

The shift evident in earlyvotin­g patterns in such districts could have broader implicatio­ns for several competitiv­e governors races in the Midwest, where Democrats are mounting strong challenges in states now controlled by Republican­s, McDonald added.

But he noted that in other parts of the country, Republican­s are making a strong showing of their own.

In Florida, for example, registered Republican­s continued to edge out Democrats in early voting through Friday. The trend is consistent with Florida’s early-voting patterns from past years, and Democratic vote counters point out that the GOP advantage has shrunk compared with 2014.

Overall, the most either side can tell is what has consistent­ly been true of Florida since 2000: The statewide contests are likely to be very close.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE CAST ballots Thursday at an early-voting center at UC Irvine, ahead of election day on Tuesday.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times PEOPLE CAST ballots Thursday at an early-voting center at UC Irvine, ahead of election day on Tuesday.
 ?? Loren Elliott Getty Images ?? EARLY VOTERS wait in Houston last week. Texas is on track to see over 3 million more people vote in this year’s midterm than in 2014.
Loren Elliott Getty Images EARLY VOTERS wait in Houston last week. Texas is on track to see over 3 million more people vote in this year’s midterm than in 2014.

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