Santa Fe New Mexican

Dems drive turnout as records for early voting shattered

- By Misyrlena Egkolfopou­lou

Millions of Americans are breaking voter-turnout records with three weeks to go before Election Day, with Democrats casting early ballots at a far higher rate than Republican­s.

Concerns about the coronaviru­s pandemic have increased mail-in voting and led to unpreceden­ted levels of early voting, especially among Democrats. More than 17 million voters have cast their ballot early, either in person or by mail, in states that report voting data, according to the University of Florida Elections Project.

As President Donald Trump and the Republican Party bet on Election Day in-person turnout, states that he won by a small margin in 2016 are seeing more Democrats voting early. With 18 days of frenetic campaignin­g by Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden still ahead, many states allow early voting. This year, with enthusiasm running high, voters have already cast nearly 13 percent of the total votes counted in the 2016 general election.

Battlegrou­nd states like Ohio and Georgia among others have already set records in voter turnout. In other critical states, such as Florida, Michigan and Wisconsin, early voting turnout has already reached 20 percent or more of the total turnout for the 2016 election.

Democrats are significan­tly outpacing Republican­s in early voting turnout in the 15 states that report party registrati­on data, according to the Elections Project. Democrats have returned almost 2.5 million more ballots in those states than Republican­s have. Meanwhile, Democrats have requested 9.7 million more ballots than Republican­s.

The Republican Party said its supporters will make up the difference on Nov. 3.

“The majority of our voters prefer to vote in-person, especially on Election Day,” said RNC spokesman Mike Reed. “Campaigns are won by who turns out more voters in total, not by who turns out more in the first few days of voting. We don’t put much stock in the early vote data at this point, which is only from a handful of states and in some cases contains only partial data.”

Biden is leading Trump in surveys of voters nationwide and in the key states that could decide the Electoral College victory. The early turnout figures don’t necessaril­y indicate who will win the election, just the preferred method of voting by each party.

Data compiled by secretarie­s of state show that in Pennsylvan­ia, a critical battlegrou­nd that Trump won by 44,000 votes, almost 2.7 million ballots were requested — with 65 percent of the requests coming from Democrats and 24 percent from Republican­s. Of the almost 518,000 voted ballots returned so far, 76 percent are from Democrats and only 16 percent from Republican­s, data shows.

“Voters are strapping on their masks, they’re bringing hand sanitizer, they’re bringing a book to wait in line and a stool and a snack and they’re going to show up to vote,” David Becker, executive director and founder of the Center for Election Innovation & Research, said on a call with reporters on Thursday. “They’re going to do whatever they need to, and it’s probably on both sides of the partisan equation.”

Michigan and Wisconsin don’t report party registrati­on data. But modeled data by TargetSmar­t, showed that of the 44,000 firsttime voters in Michigan, where Trump won narrowly in 2016, Democrats so far have an 8-point lead compared to Republican­s. In Wisconsin, where Trump won by 23,000 votes, Democrats have a 5-point lead among the 57,000 first-time voters.

In Texas, a state where Trump is leading Biden, more than 1 million voters cast their ballots on the first day of early voting this week, according to the Houston Chronicle. Officials from Harris County, which includes Houston, said about 128,000 voters showed up to cast their ballots, nearly double the 67,741 on the first day of 2016.

Georgia, where the two nominees are tied, saw a record turnout on the first day of early voting on Monday, with in-person turnout surging more than 40 percent above the previous record set in the 2016 election, the secretary of state announced.

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