2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
Other/No Affiliation | 1,181,932 | 1,219,220 | 1,231,488 | 1,303,722 | 1,233,748 |
Republicans | 3,222,286 | 3,254,206 | 3,254,822 | 3,517,090 | 3,423,465 |
Democrats | 4,030,797 | 4,075,622 | 4,062,752 | 4,183,292 | 4,018,914 |
So as you can see, while gaining registrations in 2022 (as per the Reuters article may indeed be true, the claim its a huge change is laughable... GOP would need to gain 70k registrations just to get back to 2020 levels.
The GOP registration gains this year have NOT remotely put them back at 2020 levels, nor have the dramatically shifted the percentages of the registration advantage the D's have in PA.
Highest registration of both parties to date was 2020:
D = 46.4%
R = 39.06%
I = 14.4%
You are welcome to run the numbers for various years in this history and you will find that the percentages don't change much.
49, 49, 15 is pretty much the PA electorate every cycle..
Get informed before blathering off some poorly researched lazy article as proof of some major change.. because it's just not true.
Yes, PA rural areas have trended more and more R over time, and that's exactly the places where any R who needs to win statewide, doesn't just have to win, but win HUGE... and OZ won't do it... if anything he's most likely going to underperform the generic R candidate in those areas in a few weeks.
wow, you know alot about PA. Are you working for the republican candidates, donating, manning phone banks, volunteering for precinct positions. If you’re not, then please don’t waste time and space with words. And don’t lecture people who are working to bring about change and not lecturing from the sidelines. If you’re not a RINO, you should be ...