Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. primary election set voter turnout records

- By Aseem Shukla and Julia Terruso

Republican­s had more than a dozen candidates on the ballot in two close races. Anytime there’s a primary with so many candidates and no clear front-runner, people feel more like their vote can make a difference, said Charles Stewart, a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology political scientist who uses data to study elections.

PHILADELPH­IA — The 2022 Pennsylvan­ia primary election — finally filed away in the history books after a recount — wasn’t just a wild political saga. It also set voter turnout records.

More Democrats and Republican­s voted than in any midterm election primary in the last 25 years. Who those voters are, where they live and which candidates they supported for Senate and governor show how the state’s political geography is shifting.

The Inquirer dug into decades of election data and found that this year is a high water mark — for now — of several trends that have transforme­d Pennsylvan­ia politics in recent years.

In sharp contrast to preceding decades, voters in both parties remain energetic even during midterm election years, a dynamic that started after Donald Trump’s election in 2016. Republican­s saw particular­ly sharp turnout increases this year.

The state’s urban-suburbanru­ral divides are also growing between — and within — the parties. Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s are increasing­ly relying on rural areas, while Democrats are becoming a party of city-dwellers and suburbanit­es. Those shifting coalitions have far-reaching effects.

Primary turnout usually doesn’t predict much about general election outcomes. The candidates are different. So are the voters, especially since independen­ts can’t vote in Pennsylvan­ia’s closed party primaries.

Our analysis bears this out: In presidenti­al and midterm election years, high turnout in a primary doesn’t predict general election turnout.

But primary turnout does show how and where the parties are growing.

Here’s what we learned. High turnout

Democrats still outnumber Republican­s by about 550,000 registered voters, but that’s down from more than 1 million a decade ago. And Republican­s have been far outpacing Democrats in registrati­ons in recent years.

But turnout is up in both parties. Political observers attribute that to competitiv­e primaries and voters feeling that the stakes are high.

“To grow turnout, you have to have really ripe conditions, and it’s here right now in Pennsylvan­ia,” said Chris Borick, a pollster and political science professor at Muhlenberg College.

The May 17 primary saw the highest number of votes cast in

both parties for a midterm primary over the last few decades. For Democrats, it was the fourth-highest primary turnout in the last twentyfive years, lagging only the presidenti­al races of 2020, 2016 and 2008.

For Republican­s, it was the second-highest primary turnout, after only the 2016 presidenti­al race. More Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s voted in this year’s primary than in the crowded 2012 presidenti­al primary.

Republican­s had more than a dozen candidates on the ballot in two close races. Anytime there’s a primary with so many candidates and no clear front-runner, people feel more like their vote can make a difference, said Charles Stewart, a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology political scientist who uses

data to study elections.

“When I try to understand primary turnout, I look at the closeness of the top-of-the-ticket race,” Mr. Stewart said.

That makes it all the more surprising that Democrats also saw record-high turnout for a midterm primary. State Attorney General Josh Shapiro ran unopposed in the gubernator­ial race, and Lt. Gov. John Fetterman had a 30-point lead in the polls heading into Election Day.

It could be that Democrats are fighting against a sense it will be a tough year for them, said Sarah Niebler, a political science professor at Dickinson College, noting the historical pattern in which a new president’s party loses ground in the midterm elections. “There could be a little bit of that in Pennsylvan­ia Democrats’ minds,” she said, “being a bulwark against that narrative.”

And the stakes feel heightened on both sides, Ms. Niebler said, given that Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate race could determine control of the chamber, and the governor’s race will have big implicatio­ns for abortion, voting rights and more.

But whose base is more motivated in what’s expected to be a high turnout general election is what matters, Democratic strategist J.J. Balaban said. He pointed to the New Jersey and Virginia general elections last year, when Democratic turnout surged but the GOP’s soared even higher.

“That election is a cautionary tale for my party,” he said.

Geographic sorting

The parties’ long pattern of geographic self-segregatio­n continues: Republican­s are increasing­ly a rural and exurban party, while Democrats rely on urban and suburban voters.

What’s less obvious, but equally important, is that there are also important geographic divides within the parties.

Consider rural counties. They’ve always been more important in Republican primaries than

in Democratic ones. But Democratic primary votes from rural counties now make up just one-sixth of the statewide total — half the share they did 20 years ago.

By contrast, rural votes have consistent­ly made up a third of the Republican primary electorate, even as overall turnout has increased and the rural population has significan­tly declined.

Many of these voters were mobilized by Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign and have stayed engaged.

Philadelph­ia has long anchored the Democratic primary electorate, comprising between 15% and 20% of the vote. Republican­s get less than 5% of their primary vote from Philadelph­ia.

But the city’s turnout has been stagnating for both parties.

For Republican­s, Philadelph­ia barely cracked the top 15 counties for primary votes this year. And while Democratic turnout set records, the proportion of statewide votes that came out of the city was at a 10year low.

A repeat of that in November could be trouble for the party.

“If you have a crash in Philadelph­ia, it makes the math really hard for Democrats,” Mr. Borick said. “It’s an absolute must for Democrats to be able to win.”

Democratic growth continues in the suburbs. For decades, the four Philadelph­ia collar counties were a more significan­t source of primary votes for Republican­s than for Democrats. But over the last decade, that pattern has reversed.

In 2000, Democrats got only 10% of their primary vote from these suburbs. Now, it’s almost 25%. Since Mr. Trump’s election, that’s been a bigger share than Republican­s

get from the suburbs.

Oz, McCormick had no home base

The Republican nominee, celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz, grew up in Delaware, lived for years in North Jersey, and has been living with his in-laws in Montgomery County since 2020. Dave McCormick, who narrowly lost to Mr. Oz, grew up in Bloomsburg, Columbia County, but only recently moved back from Connecticu­t, where he ran a hedge fund.

In a parochial state where long-standing loyalties and regional pride count for a lot, both received an onslaught of criticism for being out-ofstate opportunis­ts — or “political tourists,” as some rivals called them.

“When these carpetbagg­ers lose, you will never see them again,” GOP Senate candidate Kathy Barnette said in April. “And if they should win, you will never see them again.”

Mr. Oz and Mr. McCormick were the top vote-getters, surely thanks in part to the millions they spent from their own fortunes, piping their messages into TVs across the state. But they got that support without the regional hometown boost candidates usually have.

Neither candidate was particular­ly dominant in any region of the state — especially against Ms. Barnette, who shares Mr. Oz’s current home county of Montgomery and won strong support there.

Compare that pattern with the GOP governor’s race, where there were strong hometown effects.

Although state Sen. Doug Mastriano won that race handily statewide, he lost by large margins in places where his opponents had long-standing bases of support. Former U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta ran up the score throughout Northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, where he was Hazleton’s mayor for a decade. Bill McSwain and David White won their respective homes of Chester and Delaware counties.

And Mr. Mastriano performed best in his home region of Southcentr­al Pennsylvan­ia.

The Democratic Senate race also had regional dimensions.

Although Mr. Fetterman carried every county, U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, D-Mt. Lebanon, did his best in the southwest, where he is a sitting congressma­n, and the Philadelph­ia suburbs, where his brand of moderate politics plays well. And state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta was by far his strongest in Philadelph­ia. He represents part of North Philadelph­ia in the state House.

Different voting

It’s clear rural Republican­s aren’t just becoming more reliable voters — They also tend to vote for different candidates.

While Mr. Oz and Mr. McCormick performed almost equally well in all regions of the state, smaller counties had a special affinity for far-right candidates Ms. Barnette and Mr. Mastriano.

What’s more, rural voters — as well as supporters of Ms. Barnette and Mr. Mastriano more broadly — also voted heavily in person, shunning mail voting even more than other Republican­s, who already generally avoid it.

The three candidates with the lowest share of mail votes were Mr. Mastriano, Mr. Oz and Ms. Barnette. The first two were endorsed by Mr. Trump, who has railed against mail voting. The third claimed Mr. Trump’s mantle all the same.

Different supporters

Although both candidates endorsed by Mr. Trump won their races, they did so with very different coalitions.

In fact, counties with higher Mastriano support tended to have slightly lower Oz support. They also had fewer McCormick voters.

Support for Mr. Mastriano was most strongly associated with support for Ms.

Barnette. Smaller rural counties disproport­ionately supported both Mr. Mastriano and Ms. Barnette.

Ms. Barnette and Mr. Mastriano endorsed each other and campaigned together. They both embraced far-right views and election denial and amassed large grassroots followings.

“True patriots,” Rich Hohenshilt called Mr. Mastriano and Ms. Barnette, standing outside a Barnette rally days before the primary.

Mr. Hohenshilt, 55, a longhaul truck driver from Bucks County, distribute­d lawn signs for Ms. Barnette in his travels across the state and was unimpresse­d by the other candidates, including Mr. Oz. “I believe she’s the only real conservati­ve left that’s running,” he said.

Mr. Oz and Mr. Mastriano’s different coalitions could help Republican­s in a general election, said Ms. Niebler, the Dickinson political scientist.

“If both candidates turn out their own constituen­cies and can make the argument that those voters vote for the other [candidate] … that’s good for Republican­s,” Ms. Niebler said. “You’re getting different folks demographi­cally, geographic­ally out to the polls.”

To win the general election, candidates won’t just be looking at their primary voters. Given how closely divided the state is, they’ll be looking for every vote they can peel off, including from the 15% of Pennsylvan­ia voters not registered with either party.

Mr. Oz’s general election campaign has started with events in Montgomery County, Northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia and Erie. Mr. Fetterman, sidelined from physical campaignin­g as he recovers from a stroke, has a slogan that spells out his strategy: “Every county, every vote.”

 ?? Keith Srakocic/Associated Press ?? A voter enters the polling location to cast a ballot in the Pennsylvan­ia primary election on May 17 in Harmony.
Keith Srakocic/Associated Press A voter enters the polling location to cast a ballot in the Pennsylvan­ia primary election on May 17 in Harmony.

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