The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Absentee voting impact on CT turnout unclear

Legislatur­e debates further use of no-excuse ballots

- By Kasturi Pananjady

Do more people vote if they have the option to cast an absentee ballot?

That’s one of the issues in the current debates in the Connecticu­t General Assembly over whether to allow no-excuse absentee ballots in the fall and whether to send a constituti­onal amendment to voters that would give everyone the option to vote via absentee ballot. A look at the last two presidenti­al elections suggests that while people who voted in 2020 but opted not to in 2016 were more likely to use the absentee ballot, the overall effect on turnout may not be substantia­l.

A Connecticu­t Mirror analysis of voting data from 2016 and 2020 shows that among all residents who were eligible to vote in both of those presidenti­al elections, over 400,000 more cast ballots in 2020, boosting the state’s turnout rate to 79.7 percent, about three percentage points higher than in 2016.

Of those 400,000, over 149,000 — or nearly 37 percent — opted to use the absentee ballot, an option available to them in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Of all 2020 voters, about 29 percent voted absentee.

But research does not suggest that absentee voting significan­tly increased voter turnout in 2020, said Greg Huber, a professor of political science at Yale University. The fact that voters had the chance to vote absentee and chose to do so does not necessaril­y mean that they wouldn’t have voted at all without the option.

Even though absentee voting may not have affected turnout, there are reasons to support expanding access to the voting process on principle alone, said Andrew Hall, professor of political science at Stanford University. “A lot of election administra­tors say this, I think they’re absolutely right: You want to facilitate access to voting … as a core value,” Hall said.

Turnout, absentee voting and partisansh­ip

Examining the relationsh­ip between turnout and absentee voting seems destined to be one of those interestin­g social science research questions that can be debated — but never definitive­ly answered. Key to the issue is the “what-if” scenario, what researcher­s call the counterfac­tual: Would some people have voted at all without the option? Aside from polling, which comes with its own pitfalls, it’s impossible to know for certain.

“Did more people’s vote because they can vote by mail?” Hall wanted to know, and Texas presented him with a real-life controlled experiment in 2020 that seemed perfectly suited to modeling an answer: It allowed those 65 and older to vote via absentee ballot without needing to produce

an excuse, while those 64 and under did not have the option.

“These people are all in the same state. They’ve got the same ballot with the same people on the ballot, everything is essentiall­y the same, except that one group has this option to vote by mail and the other doesn’t,” Hall said.

Though 65-year-olds embraced absentee voting, Hall found that the measure was associated with no increase in turnout when compared to 64-year-olds— even along partisan lines. Democrats were no more likely to profit from access to the option than Republican­s were, a counterint­uitive propositio­n in an election cycle where mail voting has been a distinctly partisan phenomenon and a pronounced “blue shift” made for a dramatic denouement to an extended election night.

Connecticu­t is no exception to these partisan effects. This polarized response was urged by the former president’s inflammato­ry rhetoric questionin­g the integrity of the absentee ballot

voting process. “My guess is that it’s largely a 2020 phenomenon, but not entirely,” Hall said.

Lower use of absentee ballot voting among Republican voters was already clear in the primary in Connecticu­t. But unlike the primary, the November election did not see lower overall Republican turnout. In other words, Republican­s were less likely to vote by absentee ballot than Democrats, but they posted higher turnout rates than their Democratic counterpar­ts anyway.

“There doesn’t appear to be any partisan advantage in moving to more expansive all-mail elections,” Huber said. “I think that’s an important thing to tell people worried about that, that it might advantage one party over another.”

The ‘substituti­on effect’

Though Democratic voters made more use of absentee ballot voting, “Do we really believe Democrats would have been like, ‘Oh my gosh, I can’t vote because I can’t vote absentee?’” Huber

asked. “There’s zero evidence that that’s the case.”

Hall and Huber call this the “substituti­on effect”: Voters in Connecticu­t have always had the ability to cast their vote in person. The state also allows election day registrati­on.

“People really like it, they tend to adopt it, if they’re able to, but it’s secondary to the reasons they decide whether or not to vote,” Hall said.

An analysis of the voting behavior of those who did request absentee ballots shows that they were more likely to vote in recent elections than the average Connecticu­t resident, lending credence to the idea that they are, generally speaking, enthusiast­ic voters.

Beyond turnout: Should Connecticu­t implement absentee ballot voting anyway?

Though absentee ballot voting may not significan­tly increase voter participat­ion in elections, that doesn’t mean that states shouldn’t implement the policy — particular­ly if it proves popular among residents, Hall said. “You don’t want to erect artificial barriers to people voting.”

On the other hand, there is a case for preserving the status quo since people are, generally speaking, familiar with existing processes, Hall said. “I don’t think it has to be the case that all these changes are necessary.”

From a financial perspectiv­e, “off the top of my head, going forward, if there were to be noexcuse absentee ballots in CT, there is no way to know who will bear the costs of the following items: mailing out AB applicatio­ns (if it happens at all), cost of postage of AB applicatio­ns to and from voters, cost of postage of ABs to and from voters, a mail house (if that happens at all), additional ballot drop boxes, or increased costs for the towns associated with more absentee ballots (if any),” wrote Gabe Rosenberg, spokespers­on for the Office of the Secretary of the State.

“COVID dramatical­ly changed the 2020 landscape, so this is not an accurate representa­tion of what this would cost going forward, and several policy decisions would have to be made by the legislatur­e before any costs could be projected into the future,” he added. “Generally speaking, election administra­tion is paid for on the town level, and all the costs listed below were extra resources to help with increased costs due to COVID and increased AB volume.”

In the 2020 election, 670,000 Connecticu­t residents exercised their right to vote via absentee ballot, representi­ng around 29 percent of all registered voters. The pandemic and fears of catching COVID at the polls would likely have made the option more popular last year than it would have otherwise been, so those numbers are not necessaril­y reflective of the appetite for the option in the future. But the measure’s popularity could be tested before voters directly via a ballot question.

That depends on the fate of a proposal presently being considered by the House. If it passes through both chambers with a supermajor­ity, voters can decide if they want the absentee voting option in 2022, Rosenberg said.

If it passes with a simple majority, the legislatur­e can take up the question again in 2022, and if it should pass again, voters will then see the amendment on the ballot.

“In Connecticu­t, voters face some of the biggest obstacles outside of the south,” blared a Center for Public Integrity headline last year as it pointed out that the state does not presently allow early voting either. A separate initiative on the early voting question passed without a super majority in 2019, and its passage through both chambers is essentiall­y guaranteed. It will likely be on the ballot in 2022.

The House on Tuesday is expected to take up the question of whether to put a constituti­onal amendment on the ballot that would allow no-excuse absentee voting.

 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? An analysis of the last two presidenti­al elections suggests the overall effect of absentee ballots on turnout may not be substantia­l.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media An analysis of the last two presidenti­al elections suggests the overall effect of absentee ballots on turnout may not be substantia­l.

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