I've been wondering the same thing.SouthTex99 said:
Great that R's are turning out early but will that take away from traditional strong Election Day finish? Or will strong EV go on top of strong finish? I guess time will tell.
Rich Baris (People's Pundit pollster) touched on this the other day. Fully 25% of the EV in PA did not vote in 2020. Meaning those lower propensity voters are being contacted, registered and showing up to vote. So for those voters (which public pollsters tend to miss) that is not cannibalizing election day votes.SouthTex99 said:
Great that R's are turning out early but will that take away from traditional strong Election Day finish? Or will strong EV go on top of strong finish? I guess time will tell.
Florida Early Voting Turnout Update - 10.24
— Michael Pruser (@MichaelPruser) October 24, 2024
Let's take a quick look at Florida's current turnout.
🔴Republicans - 1,226,213
🔵Democrats - 1,023,418
🟡Others - 568,294
With the start of early voting, Republicans have netted about ~100,000 votes a day. Six additional rural…
These numbers dropped over night. Dems now have a 30K lead in mail in Clark, cut 4K off GOP leas overall.
— Jon Ralston (@RalstonReports) October 24, 2024
Updating blog now... https://t.co/ienvD9V5Dr
Wisconsin‼️
— Roger Christen (@rodochri90) October 24, 2024
Early Voters Ballots
Mail in + in Person - Returned
🔴 Republicans 46.1% (+11.2)
201‘000 Votes
🔵 Democrats 34.9%
152‘300 Voteshttps://t.co/Zu6YUsNzQJ pic.twitter.com/O0SpYQcALK
Pennsylvania 🚂
— VoteHub (@VoteHubUS) October 24, 2024
Mail and absentee voting update
Total: 1,208,063 (+84,554 since Oct 23)
🔵 Democratic 60.1% | 726,619 votes (+41,895)
🔴 Republican 29.8% | 360,527 votes (+32,453)
⚪️ Other 10.1% | 120,917 votes (+10,206) pic.twitter.com/Func29u3Ri
PA MAIL RETURNS 10/24:
— CA ET Nerd (@earlyvotedata) October 24, 2024
The trend continues: Rs are really continuing their momentum. The return rate closed big again and the swing with the overall returns picked up. Another great day for Rs.
D: 726,619 60.15% (Down 0.80%)
R: 360,527 29.84% (Up 0.64%)
Total RETURNS:… https://t.co/9MhHUiIngK
In addition to the Rs turning out low/no propensity voters early, a big part of the gap between the lead the dems usually have and what they have right now is lack of D turnout in early/mail in voting. The R energy is being matched right now by D apathy and that spells big trouble for Harris if it continues to show that way.aggiehawg said:Rich Baris (People's Pundit pollster) touched on this the other day. Fully 25% of the EV in PA did not vote in 2020. Meaning those lower propensity voters are being contacted, registered and showing up to vote. So for those voters (which public pollsters tend to miss) that is not cannibalizing election day votes.SouthTex99 said:
Great that R's are turning out early but will that take away from traditional strong Election Day finish? Or will strong EV go on top of strong finish? I guess time will tell.
During the post mortem of the 2016 election, the Trump campaign was very good at identifying disaffected voters within the Rust Belt states and getting them out to vote. And it was those formerly disaffected voters (why bother? Big city votes cancel me out everytime) that tipped the balance back then.
North Carolina Early Voting Day 7
— OSZ (@OpenSourceZone) October 24, 2024
2020:
🔵 42.5% (+14.1)
🔴 28.4%
🟡 28.7%
Total: 2,475,625
2024:
🔴 34.2% (+0.2)
🔵 34.0%
🟡31.3%
Total: 2,008,166
New Hampshire early voting. 13 days to go. 2020 vs 2024
— David D. Chapman (@davidchapman141) October 24, 2024
2020
🟦 74,295 (+45,267)
🟥 29,028
2024
🟦 14,976 (+2,745)
🟥 12,231
Holy Moly!
📊 Nationwide Returns - 2024 vs. 2020:
— Quantus Insights (@QuantusInsights) October 24, 2024
2020:⁰🔵 Democrats: 17,992,444⁰🔴 Republicans: 10,174,747
2024 (so far):⁰🔵 9.3M Democrats⁰🔴 8.3M Republicans⁰⚪️ 3.5M Others
WOW, AZ R lead just leaped to 68,000 and EVEN THEN the Rs still are trailing Ds in turnout %, meaning there are still a higher % of Rs left to vote on election day than Ds.
— Larry Schweikart (@LarrySchwe94560) October 24, 2024
will25u said:New Hampshire early voting. 13 days to go. 2020 vs 2024
— David D. Chapman (@davidchapman141) October 24, 2024
2020
🟦 74,295 (+45,267)
🟥 29,028
2024
🟦 14,976 (+2,745)
🟥 12,231
Holy Moly!
Biden was in NH on the 22nd. Dems sending surrogates there to try to shore up or GOTV. Race probably closer than polls indicate but not sure it's in serious play for Trump. It's a weird state.cman1494 said:
Has Trump campaigned in NH? I haven't seen anything about him there.
Have to assume that Sununu either doesn't have the normal level of gubernatorial sway/ground game or he's holding back on Trump.Quote:
Biden was in NH on the 22nd. Dems sending surrogates there to try to shore up or GOTV. Race probably closer than polls indicate but not sure it's in serious play for Trump. It's a weird state.
The early voting does indicate fewer are excited to get out and vote for Harris.
are there more R's that typically vote on ED voting early? The anticipation is R's typically turn out heavy on ED, so if they are voting early...wouldn't that flaw the assumption the election is a big win with EV numbers up for R's?nortex97 said:
GOP has definitely bumped early voting up a lot vs. previous cycles nationally. Not clear what the real ramification is yet.📊 Nationwide Returns - 2024 vs. 2020:
— Quantus Insights (@QuantusInsights) October 24, 2024
2020:⁰🔵 Democrats: 17,992,444⁰🔴 Republicans: 10,174,747
2024 (so far):⁰🔵 9.3M Democrats⁰🔴 8.3M Republicans⁰⚪️ 3.5M Others
it will be 3 weeks before we know. I am setting the over/under at Nov 12gigemJTH12 said:
I am in full on "too good to be true" mode with all this info.
Need these next 2 weeks to fly by.
I need to know!
Silvertaps said:are there more R's that typically vote on ED voting early? The anticipation is R's typically turn out heavy on ED, so if they are voting early...wouldn't that flaw the assumption the election is a big win with EV numbers up for R's?nortex97 said:
GOP has definitely bumped early voting up a lot vs. previous cycles nationally. Not clear what the real ramification is yet.📊 Nationwide Returns - 2024 vs. 2020:
— Quantus Insights (@QuantusInsights) October 24, 2024
2020:⁰🔵 Democrats: 17,992,444⁰🔴 Republicans: 10,174,747
2024 (so far):⁰🔵 9.3M Democrats⁰🔴 8.3M Republicans⁰⚪️ 3.5M Others
And those voters may not be on any public pollster's radar, even as a Likely Voter. They are not being polled as a result. Same thing happened in 2016 when the public polls had Hillary way up. But Kellyanne Conway was very bullish on the Trump internal polls. They knew exactly who those voters were and could contact them and get them out to vote.FTAG 2000 said:
The most interesting thing for me in the numbers is GOP turnout of first time or low propensity voters. Those numbers look healthy in several swing states, which means they aren't cannibalizing the reliable voting base so much.
That's the trend across the board that should terrify Dems. There just isn't the enthusiasm on that side and why should there be?AtticusMatlock said:Biden was in NH on the 22nd. Dems sending surrogates there to try to shore up or GOTV. Race probably closer than polls indicate but not sure it's in serious play for Trump. It's a weird state.cman1494 said:
Has Trump campaigned in NH? I haven't seen anything about him there.
The early voting does indicate fewer are excited to get out and vote for Harris.
Several graphics scattered throughout this thread and the "muh polls" thread. A few combined factors are encouraging at several of the swing states:Silvertaps said:are there more R's that typically vote on ED voting early? The anticipation is R's typically turn out heavy on ED, so if they are voting early...wouldn't that flaw the assumption the election is a big win with EV numbers up for R's?nortex97 said:
GOP has definitely bumped early voting up a lot vs. previous cycles nationally. Not clear what the real ramification is yet.📊 Nationwide Returns - 2024 vs. 2020:
— Quantus Insights (@QuantusInsights) October 24, 2024
2020:⁰🔵 Democrats: 17,992,444⁰🔴 Republicans: 10,174,747
2024 (so far):⁰🔵 9.3M Democrats⁰🔴 8.3M Republicans⁰⚪️ 3.5M Others
Well considering all of the political pundits keep saying the same every damn day, the subject is omnipresent. Of course that would be reflected on this forum.Prosperdick said:
There needs to be a sticky post on the top of the politics board that reads "Yes, we know if R's that normally vote on ED vote early it doesn't change the overall number but it DOES for low propensity or first time voters."
Everyone thinks they have this keen insight that's been repeated at least 100 times on other threads.
Got it...thanks to you and other for the explanation.jimscott85 said:Several graphics scattered throughout this thread and the "muh polls" thread. A few combined factors are encouraging at several of the swing states:Silvertaps said:are there more R's that typically vote on ED voting early? The anticipation is R's typically turn out heavy on ED, so if they are voting early...wouldn't that flaw the assumption the election is a big win with EV numbers up for R's?nortex97 said:
GOP has definitely bumped early voting up a lot vs. previous cycles nationally. Not clear what the real ramification is yet.📊 Nationwide Returns - 2024 vs. 2020:
— Quantus Insights (@QuantusInsights) October 24, 2024
2020:⁰🔵 Democrats: 17,992,444⁰🔴 Republicans: 10,174,747
2024 (so far):⁰🔵 9.3M Democrats⁰🔴 8.3M Republicans⁰⚪️ 3.5M Others
- R EV participation is outpacing D participation in previous cycles.
- D participation, in some cases, is down vs previous years.
- R EV participation from infrequent voters is up, both on a standalone basis and in relation to D EV participation.
- D EV participation has been increasing as a proportion of their total participation year over year.
It's encouraging in the aggregate, but definitely hard to say how much cannibalization their will be. The offset to the cannibalization will be the folks that vote on election day that might have otherwise turned away because of the longer lines.