Do Democrats really win when people vote? We’re about to find out

by | Oct 15, 2020 | 2020 elections, Editor's Blog | 1 comment

As early voting begins today, my twitter feed is full of photos of long lines at polling locations an hour or more before the polls even open. Democrats are celebrating and sharing the images. Republicans are silent. One of the starkest differences to have emerged in recent years is that Democrats think voting is good and Republicans think it is risky. Democrats want to make access to the ballot box easier. Republicans want to make it harder. In other words, one party believes in democracy a bit more than the other.  

For years, if not decades, Democrats have said, “If more people vote, we win.” This year, we are about to find out if that’s true. Early voting indicates the country will have a record turnout. Democrats are almost giddy at the prospect.

In North Carolina, the coronavirus has caused a spike in mail-in ballots, a method of voting that has traditionally been small and dominated by Republicans. This year, according the political scientists Michael Bitzer and Chris Cooper, Democrats are outpacing Republicans by wide margins. So far, Democrats have made 47% of the 1,344,643 ballot requests, while Republicans requested 19% and Unaffiliated voters comprised 33%. Of the 533,677 accepted, 51% came from Democrats, 18% from Republicans and 31% from Unaffiliated voters.  

In Battleground states, according to Tom Bonier of Target Smart, Democrats hold a 15% advantage among people who have already voted compared to 8% four years ago. In addition, almost three times as many first-time voters have voted than did in at this point in 2016. Democrats hold a 7% advantage among these voters as opposed to the 1% lead they held four years ago. Black voters and college educated white voters are spiking while non-college whites are plummeting. Women are seeing a “massive” increase in turnout, making up 55% of the voters so far compared to 52% at this point in 2016.

As Bonier notes, Democrats have always voted early while Republicans tend to wait for election day. The question is whether or not the GOP sees a large enough surge on November 3 to overcome the huge hole that Democrats are digging for them right now. Bonier also says we will certainly see record number of voters and may see the largest turnout as percentage of voting age population in more than a century. 

We are about to find out if Democrats really win when people vote. 

1 Comment

  1. j bengel

    Based on reports in the News & Observer, roughly 11% of all eligible NC voters had voted by the time the polls closed on Day One of early voting. They didn’t say if that number included those who were in line at closing time or just the ones who had put ballots on the scanner, but either way that is an altogether impressive number in the context of 21st century elections. Some back of the napkin math says that depending on how things trend in early voting counts between now and Halloween, a turnout of 40% before Nov 3 even arrives isn’t unrealistic. The optimistic end of that curve is around 47.5%, and the pessimistic end is about 10% lower. If we get closer to the high end than the low end, we could see the 62.3% of the 2008 election surpassed.

    The unknowable quantity in all this is how the Independents break. So far they’ve been tracking about where you’d expect in terms of turnout — behind the Dems, but ahead of the Republicans. But it seems unlikely that they’ll be evenly split, so how they’ll break is going to be the source of a lot of sleepless nights between now and the finish. I know how ONE I vote went, and in a just and fair universe, I’ll have a lot of company.

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