The Columbus Dispatch

Dems dominating in nation’s early voting

Republican­s need robust turnout on Election Day

- Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – As Democrats dominate mail-in early voting, President Donald Trump will have to rely on strong in-person Election Day turnout among Republican­s to defeat Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

The spread of the COVID-19 virus is surging in several Midwest battlegrou­nd states – Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan – where the president needs Republican voters to flock to the polls.

Trump’s yearlong disparagem­ent of mail-in voting turned off many of his voters to absentee ballots. Democrats embraced the method, casting nearly double the mail-in ballots of Republican voters nationwide. Though Republican­s narrowed the gap with in-person early voting, Trump heads into Election Day facing a likely vote deficit nationally and in swing states.

More than 92 million people, a record, have voted early, either in-person or by mail, according to the U.S. Elections Project.

Democratic voters accounted for 48.3% of all early votes cast, and Republican­s accounted for 41.5%, according to Targetsmar­t, a Democratic elections data firm that combines party informatio­n from states and its own modeling. Voters with no party affiliation made up 10.2% of early voters. Polling has shown Biden ahead with independen­t voters, although the margin has thinned.

Trump has one day to turn the trend.

“His voters have clearly listened to his call to avoid mail voting, and many of them are waiting for that Election Day experience to go out there,” said Tom Bonier, CEO of Targetsmar­t. “Because of what we’ve seen with the early vote – Democrats are reaching record levels of turnout – Republican­s are going to need to do something similar on Election Day. They’re going to need to vote in numbers of the likes of which we’ve never seen before.”

Democrats turned in 49% of the 33 million mail ballots returned in the 19 states that detail party affiliation, data from the U.S. Elections Project shows. Republican­s accounted for 26%, and voters with no party affiliation, 24%.

In the past two weeks, Republican­s chipped away at the Democratic lead as early in-person voting exploded in Texas, Florida and North Carolina. Among the states that release party identification data of voters, Republican­s made up 42% of the in-person early voters; Democratic voters, 36%.

On Oct. 12, Democrats led Republican in overall votes nationally, 55% to 34%, according to Targetsmar­t, but Republican­s have cut the advantage.

h In Florida, Democrats accounted for 40% of the state’s 8.3 million early votes, Republican­s made up 38% and voters with no party affiliation 21%, the U.S. Elections Project found. Democrats returned 46% of the state’s absentee ballots, while Republican­s returned 31%. The numbers flipped for inperson voting: 46% for Republican­s and 32% for Democrats.

h In North Carolina, Democrats returned more than twice the mail ballots as Republican­s, 46% of the 884,000 absentee ballots to 20% for Republican­s. Unlike Florida, Democrats narrowly edged Republican­s in in-person early voting, 36% to 35%, and 29% of the state’s early in-person voters had no party affiliation. More than 4.3 million North Carolinian­s voted early.

h In Pennsylvan­ia, Democrats accounted for a massive 68% of the 2.3 million returned mail ballots, more than three times the 22% made up by Republican­s. (Pennsylvan­ia does not have traditiona­l in-person early voting but does have early in-person absentee voting.)

Because of the disparity in Pennsylvan­ia, Trump is likely to jump out to a large lead on election night as in-person Election Day results, likely to favor him, are posted. Biden probably will begin erasing the gap as absentee ballots are tallied, which could take days because Pennsylvan­ia does not start processing them until Election Day.

“In a place like Pennsylvan­ia, what he’ll need to do from a turnout perspectiv­e will be substantia­l,” perhaps topping Biden by 45 percentage points in Election Day voting, Bonier said of Trump.

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