Posted on 10/24/2010 6:45:05 PM PDT by Spydergoo
Tonight's Updated Early Vote Numbers:
Colorado: 2008: D +1.8 2010: R +5.3 R Gain: +7.1
Florida: 2008: D +8.3 2010: R +19.1 R Gain: +27.4
Iowa: 2008: D +18 2010: D +7.8 R Gain: +10.2
Louisiana 2008: D +29.3 2010: D +2.4 R Gain: +26.9
Maine: 2008: D +13.4 2010: D +0.1 R Gain: +13
Maryland: 2008: ?? 2010: D +37 R Gain: ??
Nevada - Statewide: 2008: ?? 2010: R +0.1 R Gain: ??
Nevada - Clark County: 2008: D +21.4 2010: D +8.7 R Gain: +12.7
Nevada - Washoe County: 2008: D +11.8 2010: R +6.2 R Gain: +18
North Carolina: 2008: D +21.2 2010: D +6.1 R Gain: +15.1
West Virginia: 2008: D +23.9 2010: D +19.7 R Gain: +4.2
Source: http://elections.gmu.edu/early_vote_2008.html http://elections.gmu.edu/early_vote_2010.html
Oh, and as a bonus, here’s numbers for Washington State.
The following counties are listed from highest to lowest performance in 2010 over 2008:
Franklin: 26.4%
Benton: 23.6%
Whatcom: 21.1%
Thurston: 20.9%
Yakima: 20.7%
Kitsap: 20.7%
Spokane: 19.6%
Cowlitz: 17.3%
King: 16.5%
Pierce: 15.2%
Clark: 13.9%
Snohomish: 13.4%
And re-sorted for Obama over McCain in 2008:
Benton: 36/62
Franklin: 37/61
Yakima: 44/55
Spokane: 48/49
Clark: 52/46
Kitsap: 55/43
Pierce: 55/43
Cowlitz: 56/42
Snohomish: 58/40
Whatcom: 58/40
Thurston: 60/38
King: 70/28
It’s encouraging to see King County in the bottom half of both lists.
Not sure what your top set of county numbers means. Does it mean that R turnout exceeds D turnout by X%?
It’s the percentage of 2010 early vote over the 2008 early vote, represented as a formula: (2010 Early Vote)/(2008 Total Vote).
I am still confused. Can you expound some more?
To further clarify, Washington state doesn’t provide breakdown of D or R registration, just the raw early vote totals by county (and not by every county). So, what my number crunching shows is the higher the percentage of 2010 early vote totals in a county, the higher the turnout. And by and large, the counties that McCain won, are turning out bigger percentages of voters over 2008.
Dumb question - since Washington is a mail-it-in state now, how do we know any early vote turnout numbers?
In the most simple terms:
King County went 70% Obama and 28% McCain in 2008. So far, 16.5% of the 2008 early voters showed back up to vote.
Franklin County went 37% Obama and 61% McCain in 2008. So far, 26.4% of the 2008 early voters showed back up to vote.
King County is very Dem heavy. They aren’t showing up to vote at the rate that the Rep-heavy county is. This appears to be a trend across all of the Washington State numbers.
Got it. Thanks.
Good question. Each county (or at least some of them) provide daily updates on the number of ballots (mail-in/absentee/in-person) received. Not all counties in Washington State do this. But enough that we can see the trends.
As we have seen in the past, King County voters don't need to "show up"; they somehow manage to get counted anyway. Enough to elect a governor, for instance.
Same for the Independants...
See www.greeleytribune.com
McClatchey had a poll out that showed Rossi ahead in every area except King county, which put him in a virtual tie in the Puget Sound area. Rossi says that he needs 41% in King county. That is not impossible since the independents are voting for Rossi 57%-36%.
I don’t get your numbers at all nor do I find them at the cited link?
Looking good!
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