[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: What the early voting numbers tell us about who may be winning the race for the White House Based on the numbers that we have so far, are there some clues that we can glean about who is winning the race for the White House? Up to this point, more than 75 million Americans have already voted, and that blows away anything that we have ever seen before. To put that in perspective, President Trump received a total of 62.9 million votes in 2016, and that was enough for him to win the election. We havent seen this much enthusiasm for voting in a really long time, and both campaigns are taking this as a positive sign. Most of the early votes that have been cast so far have been mail-in votes. But early in-person voting is smashing all previous records as well, and normally Democrats jump out to a lead in early in-person voting. But this time around, it is Republicans that have taken the lead. Not all states report the party affiliation of those that have voted early in-person, but for the states that do give us that information the totals are very interesting
Democrats 3,115,299 votes (36.9 percent) Of course there is a really good reason why Democrats are trailing in that category. In 2020, they are voting by mail in record numbers, and so not as many of them will be showing up in person to vote. According to the latest numbers, more than 50 million mail-in ballots have been returned so far. That is an absolutely astounding number, and it has already surpassed some of the projections that I saw for mail-in voting earlier in the campaign. For the states that report the party affiliation of those that have voted by mail, here are the totals up to this point
Democrats 14,234,861 votes (50.5 percent) Multiple national surveys have found that the number of Democrats planning to vote by mail is about twice as high as the number of Republicans that plan to vote by mail, so these numbers are right in line with what we would expect. The big problem for Democrats is the fact that there are still 41 million mail-in ballots outstanding, and time is rapidly running out to get those ballots in on time. The following comes from the Washington Post
Tuesday marked the last day that postal and election administration experts said ballots could be mailed to ensure delivery in time for Election Day, based on national first-class mail service. The passing of the informal deadline set off a flurry of advisories from election officials and posts on social media encouraging voters who had yet to postmark their ballots to instead drop them off at voting centers or consider voting in person. If you have not sent in your mail-in ballot yet, I would very strongly encourage you to vote on Election Day instead, because at this point many mail-in ballots are not likely to make it through the system in time to be counted. The Postal Service is absolutely overwhelmed right now, and the percentage of mail that is being delivered on time is way down compared to last year
In 17 postal districts representing 10 battleground states and 151 electoral votes, the average on-time delivery rate for first-class mail was 64.2 percent on Tuesday, 27.6 percent lower than the performance score for those districts at the beginning of the year. And this is particularly true in some of the most important areas of our most critical swing states
In the Philadelphia Metro postal district which includes the city and suburbs crucial to Democratic nominee Joe Bidens hopes in the state 43 percent of Tuesdays mail was delivered on time, the Postal Service reported to the District Court of the District of Columbia in filings related to litigation over the agencys service. That represented a steep drop from earlier in the week: 61.2 percent on Monday and 58.4 percent on Saturday. In Detroit, 52.6 percent of Tuesdays mail was on time. In Northern Ohio, 56 percent; in Wisconsin, 60.7 percent; in South Florida, 62.9 percent. In the end, Democrats may have really sabotaged themselves by pushing mail-in voting so hard. They could potentially have millions of votes that are not counted because they were sent in too late, and that could be enough to cost them the election. National surveys have shown that Trump voters overwhelmingly plan to vote in person on Election Day, and that should help Trump burst out to a significant lead initially. The Biden campaign is counting on the mail-in ballots to swing the election their way once they are all eventually counted, but any ballots that do not get returned on time will not be counted at all. Switching gears, we also know that young voters and minority voters are voting in higher numbers than we have seen in the past. For example, just consider these numbers from the state of Florida
Young voters in Florida have almost doubled their share of the votes cast so far compared to this point in 2016. Voters 65 or older made up 50% of the early vote at this time four years ago, but only make up 41% now. Floridas early voting electorate is slightly more diverse compared to this point in 2016. Both Hispanic voters and Black voters have increased their shares of ballots already cast, with Hispanic voters accounting for about 16% of the early vote (up from 14% in 2016) and Black voters at 13% (up from 12% in 2016). You would think that those numbers should be a positive sign for Democrats, but Trump is getting an unusually high level of support from Black men and Latino men. In fact, one recent survey found that Joe Bidens lead among Latino men is just 8 points
And the backbone of that support comes from men. A New York Times/Siena College poll found that former Vice President Joe Biden leads by 34 percentage points among Latina voters, but with Latino men his lead is 8 points. Hispanic men in particular are a swing vote, said Michelle Mayorga, a New Mexico-based pollster who worked on polls for Equis Research focused on Latino voters. They are a vote that we have to go and get. Anyone that believes that they know exactly what will happen on the night of the election and beyond is probably in for quite a surprise. As I discussed yesterday, the national polls are all over the place. The polls that the mainstream media depends upon tend to show Biden with a huge national lead, but independent polls show a much tighter race and they also often show Trump leading in the most critical swing states. I think that both sides have reason to be very nervous, and I think that it is quite likely that it will take an extended period of time before we finally have a clear winner. So far, all of the numbers seem to indicate that this will be a very close race, and the future of our country hangs in the balance. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|