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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(107,900 posts)
Tue Oct 25, 2016, 01:09 PM Oct 2016

Americans Love Early Voting, And It Might Help Clinton

Early voting is already underway in many states, and this election season offers more opportunities than ever for voters to cast a ballot ahead of Election Day. Massachusetts and Minnesota, for example, are offering newly expanded early voting options, and other states are expanding mail balloting.

And for the past 16 years, voters across the country have been casting more and more early presidential ballots. According to data from the AP Election Research Group as reported by CBS News, only 16 percent of the votes for president were cast early in 2000, but by 2012, that number had risen to 36 percent. Since 1996, according to data from the Census Bureau, Americans have reported a threefold increase in alternative voting methods. This year, 30 to 40 percent of the vote is expected to come from ballots cast before Nov. 8.

Currently, the turnout of early voters in North Carolina is running slightly behind where it was in 2012, according to Michael McDonald, an associate professor of political science at the University of Florida and an expert on early voting. North Carolina’s registered Republicans were voting more than registered Democrats in mail-in early voting, but once in-person early voting began, turnout spiked among registered Democrats. In Iowa, which is currently a tossup state, Democrats are expected to lead in the early vote, according to McDonald.

Here’s an explanation of how early voting works and what it might mean this year.

What is early voting?

Technically, every state allows at least one form of early voting, the absentee ballot, but that’s not really what experts mean by early voting. That’s because 20 states require an excuse to cast an absentee ballot. The accepted excuses vary by state, but usually include being a student enrolled in an out-of-state school, having an illness, injury or disability that prevents you from voting in person, and being out of state on Election Day.

Usually when people talk about early voting, they’re referring to the methods that don’t require excuses, which come in two forms: mail-in and in-person. Mail-in early voting is similar to absentee voting — voters receive a ballot in the mail,1 fill it out, and mail it in or drop it off before or on Election Day. For in-person early voting, voters go to polling stations during designated days and times to cast their ballots before Election Day. While several states are expanding access to in-person early voting, three states (Ohio, Arizona and Nebraska), all of which have Republican-controlled legislatures, have cut back on early voting opportunities or limited mail ballot collection for the first time in 2016, according to a report from the Brennan Center for Justice.

http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/americans-love-early-voting-and-it-might-help-clinton/

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