New York Post

$5B green elex wave

Record midterm tab

- By MARK MOORE and CARL CAMPANILE mmoore@nypost.com

A record $5.2 billion will have been spent on this year’s midterm elections, which drew the biggest flood of voters in nearly 50 years, according to projection­s Tuesday.

No campaign spending for a midterm has ever exceeded $4.2 billion after adjusting for inflation — yet the latest reporting period, in mid-October, showed that candidates, parties, PACs and nonprofits had already torn through $4.7 billion, according to the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics, which predicted the eventual $5 billion-plus figure.

“The significan­ce of this election is clear. But whether it’s a blue wave or a red wave, one thing is certain: a wave of money [moved] toward Election Day, much of it coming from the wealthiest donors targeting this year’s most competitiv­e races,” said Sheila Krumholz, the CPR’s director.

Casino mogul Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, were the largest donors in 2018, giving about $113 million to Republican­s.

Philanthro­pist Tom Steyer and his wife, Kat Taylor, came in second, giving Democrats $51 million.

Meanwhile, voter turnout was on track to obliterate the 36.7 percent figure from the 2014 midterms in 2014. The 45 percent turnout expected this year would be the highest since the 47 per- cent in 1970, said University of Florida Professor Michael McDonald.

The highest turnout ever recorded for a midterm is 49 percent, in 1966.

Driving the turnout was the electorate’s feelings about President Trump, according to CNN exit polls.

Two-thirds of voters said this midterm is a referendum on Trump — with a majority saying they were opposed to him.

One in six voters said it was their first time voting in a midterm.

Voting was so heavy in some polling places that election officials were caught flat-footed without enough ballots early Tuesday.

“They ran out of ballots at the Springdale Community Church” in Lousville, Ky., tweeted Katie Cummins.

“Some people left and didn’t cast a vote because they were frustrated. The officials said they normally have 400 people by this time and today they had 1,100. More ballots on the way.”

But there was one place that officials made sure its residents could vote — the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Astronauts can request special absentee ballots about six months in advance, then send their votes electronic­ally to be recorded, NASA said.

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