The Arizona Republic

Ariz. Dems: Early vote totals show ‘blue wave’

Surge in participat­ion could decide close races

- Dustin Gardiner

Arizona Democrats have seen a massive surge in early voting over the past week, bolstering prediction­s for a “blue wave” in Tuesday’s elections.

Early ballot returns released Friday show Democrats are on track to narrow the voter-participat­ion gap with Republican­s to its lowest level in any midterm election in recent history.

That surge in Democratic participat­ion could help the party flip close races or win contests for the U.S. Senate, secretary of state and superinten­dent of public instructio­n.

Democrats had significan­tly lagged Republican­s when early ballot returns started coming in three weeks ago, leading some to speculate that the blue wave had crested.

But that changed over the past week as Democrats shaved the GOP’s

early-vote advantage to less than 8 percentage points. Republican­s typically have a 12-percentage-point turnout edge in midterm elections.

Republican­s still have a distinct advantage given that they have about 136,000 more registered voters in Arizona, but the Democratic swell could swing some races.

Democratic wave arrived ‘late’

Republican consultant Paul Bentz, of HighGround Public Affairs, said the numbers show the “blue wave is real, but it’s just a little late.” He said Democrats have made up for a slow start.

“Before a tsunami hits, the water recedes from the beach,” he said Friday afternoon. “We weren’t seeing the water recede from the beach, and now we are.”

Bentz said the swell could play a deciding factor in races where polling shows Democrats are close, given strong support from women and registered independen­ts.

He mentioned three races in particular where HighGround’s polling shows a dead heat:

❚ U.S. Senate, with Democrat Kyrsten Sinema and Republican Martha McSally.

❚ Arizona secretary of state, with Democrat Katie Hobbs and Republican Steve Gaynor.

❚ Arizona superinten­dent of public instructio­n, with Democrat Kathy Hoffman and Republican Frank Riggs.

Early returns also bode well for Democrats hoping to pick up seats in the Arizona Legislatur­e: The data shows Democrats are competing for the turnout edge in traditiona­lly GOP-leaning suburban areas, such as Chandler and Ahwatukee Foothills.

As of Friday, more than 1.46 million voters had cast early ballots. About 75 percent of Arizona voters typically cast an early mail-in ballot, so those returns are a strong barometer.

Wednesday was the last day to return a ballot by mail. Voters who haven’t returned their ballots should deliver them in person to any polling place on Election Day.

The early-vote tally thus far still gives the GOP a clear leg up: 41.8 percent are Republican­s, compared with 33.9 percent for Democrats; 24 percent are unaffiliat­ed, according to the Secretary of State’s Office.

But the early-ballot count doesn’t indicate who individual voters cast their ballots for, and many races could have crossover voters.

Democrats invest in turnout

Democrats have invested heavily in Arizona this year, breaking spending records in several statewide races and fielding more candidates across the board.

Even before early returns came in, there was evidence of a Democratic swell: Voters in the August primary shattered the state’s previous record for turnout in a party-nominating contest.

The state has also seen an increase in new voter registrati­on, particular­ly among those in the youngest voting-age demographi­c.

Josselyn Berry, co-director of Progress Now Arizona, said the swell of Democrats voting comes after years of activist work to register and turnout more young voters and voters of color.

She said MiAZ, a coalition of progressiv­e groups, has knocked on almost 1 million doors this cycle, encouragin­g voters to fill out their mail-in ballots and get to the polls.

“People tend to think of Arizona as a pretty solidly red state,” Berry said. “But clearly, something big is happening.”

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