Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Voters are already streaming to polls in record numbers

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – Voters across the country have been crowding into polling places and mailing in ballots in numbers rarely seen in an off-year election.

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, 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 cliffhange­r race for governor features a Donald Trump acolyte competing against a progressiv­e who would be the state’s first African-american governor.

The picture in California so far is more status quo. The state has at least a half dozen hotly contested congressio­nal districts, which could play a big role in whether Democrats take back a majority in the House. But in the rest of the state, the lack of a close race at the top of 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. About 3 million ballots were cast in the state by Friday.

Nationwide, as early voting was coming to a close in many states 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 offyear 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 percent of voting-eligible Americans cast ballots, according to Mcdonald’s compilatio­ns of state data. In 2014, only 37 percent voted – the lowest turnout in years. The trends so far indicate that close to half of those eligible will vote this time, Mcdonald estimated.

Because Democrats rely heavily on the votes of younger people and minorities, who are less consistent in their voting than are older whites, their candidates usually benefit from a higher turnout. Voters stand in line inside of the Board of Education on Friday to early vote in Cincinnati, Ohio.

As a result, Democrats hope that the numbers so far point to a much-ballyhooed “blue wave,” but they are reluctant to say so. Misinterpr­etation of early voting trends in 2016 led to embarrassm­ent after Donald Trump’s surprise victory.

Early voting figures can easily mislead. States release a trove of data about the voters – informatio­n on their party affiliatio­ns, voting history, age and so on. But no one knows what candidates they are voting

for. Nor can anyone be sure whether people who vote early are the same voters who would have otherwise shown up Tuesday.

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.

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