Yuma Sun

Arizona voters break record for primary turnout; 1.2M cast ballots

Uptick fueled by hefty increase in Democratic participat­ion

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PHOENIX — A recordbrea­king number of Arizona voters cast ballots in this year’s primary election.

State election officials say 1.2 million voters mailed in a ballot or showed up at the polls for the August 28 primary. That beat the previous record of nearly 1 million voters in the 2010 primary.

The total for 2018 represents around 33 percent turnout.

The uptick was fueled by a hefty increase in Democratic participat­ion. Around 524,000 Democrats turned out, compared to around 377,000 Democrats who turned out in the 2016 primary. And around 671,000 Republican­s voted, compared to around 606,000 Republican­s in 2016.

“The split between Republican­s and Democrats is just very, very narrow compared to what it normally is,” said Garrett Archer, a senior elections analyst with the Arizona secretary of state.

Chad Campbell, a political consultant in Arizona and former Democratic lawmaker, chalked up the increased Democratic participat­ion to anti-Trump sentiment.

“It signals increased enthusiasm on the Democratic side, and I think that we’re seeing that across the country,” he said.

The increased participat­ion comes at a time when national Democrats see Arizona as possible place to flip seats. A competitiv­e U.S. Senate race between Democratic Rep. Kyrsten Sinema and Republican Rep. Martha McSally is at the top of the ticket, with Democrats hoping to flip McSally’s former congressio­nal seat in their bid to take control of the House of Representa­tives.

But doing so may rest on Democratic candidates wooing a swath of independen­t voters to help them outnumber Republican­s: Arizona has around 1.26 million Republican voters and around 1.22 million unaffiliat­ed voters, compared to about 1.1 million Democratic voters.

Arizona Democratic Party chair Felecia Rotellini says the party is confident that voters are engaged, but “we’re not taking a single vote granted.” Field offices around the state are continuing to register people to vote and signing voters up for permanent voteby-mail status, she said.

On the other side of the aisle, Republican­s are continuing to ramp up efforts to hold their seats — including defending Gov. Doug Ducey as he seeks a second term against Democratic challenger David Garcia.

Renae Eze, the Arizona communicat­ions director for the Republican National Committee, cited the increased Democratic turnout to a spike in competitiv­e primaries — and said she thinks Arizona Republican voters will continue to out-vote their Democratic counterpar­ts.

“I think we’re going to keep that lead, in good part to the great candidates we have,” she said.

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