The Denver Post

Sign-ups surge amid protests

- By Nick Corasaniti and Isabella Grullón Paz

In the nationwide protests after the killing of George Floyd in police custody, Democratic leaders held out hope that the sweeping calls for racial justice and structural change would have a decidedly convention­al side effect: more people would be motivated to vote in the fall. Activists holding voter registrati­on clipboards became commonplac­e at protests.

Now, new voter registrati­on data shows that a surge in sign-ups driven by the protests may have indeed rippled across the electorate.

In the first half of June, a month when, during an election year, voter registrati­on normally suffers from a summer lull, more than 520,000 Democrats registered to vote. That’s a nearly 50% increase over the previous month’s total and a rate that outpaced Republican­s in nearly every state during those two weeks, according to data compiled by TargetSmar­t, a Democratic data firm.

Some states, such as Wisconsin, had not reported their registrati­on statistics for June at the time the report was released, meaning the increase is probably larger.

Republican voter registrati­on in the same time period increased just 6%, to 304,000.

The surge was momentary and did not universall­y change the overall dynamics of voter registrati­on in 2020 — by the end of the month, Republican­s had caught up in many red states and some swing states, and the registrati­on numbers for both parties are still well below 2016 levels. And there may have been other factors at work Early June brought an easing of pandemic-related restrictio­ns around the country, such as the reopening of election offices and motor vehicle commission­s, which most likely made it easier to register to vote.

Still, the sheer size of the increase during such a specific time makes it likely that the protests played a significan­t part in the surge.

Every state that provided data experience­d a boost in registrati­on beginning the first week of June, according to TargetSmar­t. In Michigan, registrati­on tripled in the first week of June. In Minnesota, the epicenter of the protests, registrati­on more than tripled that week. In Colorado, registrati­on increased by more than 200% in the first week of June. In California, voter registrati­on doubled during the protests.

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