Posted on 09/27/2004 8:55:34 PM PDT by Mike Fieschko
DES MOINES, Sept. 26 - They're off and voting in Iowa, even before all the corn has been harvested.
In the state's 20 most populous counties, which account for about 60 percent of the vote, more than 140,345 absentee ballots had been applied for as of last Wednesday, according to a survey of county auditors by The Des Moines Register. Under Iowa law, anyone can request an absentee ballot, no questions asked, and roughly three times as many Democrats as Republicans did so in the counties studied by The Register. Early voting began on Thursday, 40 days before Election Day.
Which is one reason Gov. Tom Vilsack, a Democrat, is optimistic about John Kerry's chances of carrying the state. Four years ago, Al Gore was outvoted at the polls; his entire 4,144-vote margin of victory in Iowa was from absentee voters.
If he is to win, Mr. Kerry can ill afford to lose states that Mr. Gore won, like Iowa and Wisconsin, two Midwestern battlegrounds.
Most polls show President Bush with a small advantage here (a Mason-Dixon survey, reported last week, had him up, 48 percent to 42 percent, with a margin of error of four percentage points), and both parties are still pressing hard.
On Thursday, John Edwards, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, spoke in Cedar Rapids in close-fought eastern Iowa, and two surrogates for Mr. Bush spoke in the same area last week, his wife, Laura Bush on Friday in Eldridge and Senator Rick Santorum, Republican of Pennsylvania, on Saturday in Davenport.
"At the end of the day, it's a very simple thing - Iraq," Mr. Edwards said, perhaps mindful of Iowa's long tradition of supporting antiwar politicians. "George Bush made this mess, and he can't fix it."
Mr. Vilsack said in an interview at the Governor's Mansion that that was the right approach - "a nice, tight strategy, with the candidates focusing on Iraq and their message reinforced by television ads and the daily pounding of the news from Iraq" - because "everyone knows what a disaster Iraq is."
Unlike the case with many other ranking Democrats, he argued that Mr. Kerry's timing was perfect.
"This campaign is like one of those classic John Elway games," the governor said. "The team with the ball at the end of the game wins. You can't surge too early, or you give the ball back, and you can't do that with Karl Rove and George Bush. They're too sharp. If you give them the ball back, they'll go down the field and score."
Normally, Iowa's seven electoral votes are not enough to attract the candidates' attention. This state's usual time in the political spotlight comes at the beginning of the campaign year, in midwinter, not toward the end.
Once the caucuses, Iowa's version of a primary, are completed in January, the state falls off the political map. But this is no normal year, and even small packets of electoral votes are very precious.
"It feels like ground zero here, and it has felt like that for nine months," said Kenneth M. Quinn, a retired diplomat who is president of the World Food Prize Foundation, based in Des Moines. "Both parties are clearly putting an enormous premium on the state, with a visit from someone or other almost every day and an endless barrage of TV ads. It's only seven electoral votes, but it could well be the decisive seven."
Mr. Kerry won the caucuses this year after Howard Dean faltered and Representative Richard A. Gephardt's broad labor support proved insufficient to carry him to victory. So Mr. Kerry is well known to Iowa's electorate, perhaps as well known as Mr. Bush.
But Dennis J. Goldford, an associate professor in the politics and international relations department at Drake University, said the Democrat had "run a remarkably incoherent campaign, which raises grave doubts about his ability to mount a comeback."
As for Mr. Kerry's emphasis on Iraq, Iowans are dovish enough, Professor Goldford said, but in the polls taken to date, "Kerry doesn't get the support of all the people here who think Iraq is a mess."
"To oust an incumbent,'' he added, "you have to make the point that he has created a mess. But you also have to show that you have the ideas and the gravitas to clean it up, and so far Kerry hasn't done that."
David Yepsen, longtime political expert for The Register, said he sensed another problem for Mr. Kerry, rural voters. Mr. Bush has been gaining support in the countryside, Mr. Yepsen said, "because there's a cultural disconnect between the chainsaw gang and the windsurfer," meaning Mr. Kerry, on religious issues, as well as social ones.
The number of farm families is declining precipitously, even in Iowa, but the number of rural voters, some retired and some with jobs in the city, remains highly significant.
So the Democrats' efforts to promote absentee voting could be crucial to Mr. Kerry. For months, they have been sending young canvassers door to door to interview people who otherwise might not vote. They have been searching, Mr. Vilsack said, for potential voters who have children serving in Iraq or who have lost jobs or feel trapped on an economic treadmill or who are worried about the mounting cost of health care.
"There are tens of thousands of people like that," the governor continued. "When the interviewer finds them, he encourages them to apply for an absentee ballot, helps them if they need help and punches their names and their concerns into a Palm Pilot. Then at the end of the day he transmits the information back to our database."
Phyllis Peters, a spokeswoman for the secretary of state, said that as of Thursday, 199,593 absentee ballots had been applied for through the 99 counties.
No one doubts the efficiency of the operation. Representative Jim Leach, an Iowa City Republican who described the presidential outlook here as "murky, fractionally favoring the president," said the Democrats' absentee effort was "the one thing that gives Kerry a better chance than the polls give him."
The Iowa Democratic Party, Mr. Leach said, "has now become the single best organized political party in the entire country."
The question is whether the Democrats will actually succeed in attracting voters to the polls who otherwise would have stayed at home, thus increasing their overall total, or whether they are simply churning the same pool of voters, persuading people to vote absentee who would otherwise have showed up to vote.
Some Republicans speculate that the Democrats want to lock up as many of their votes as possible before the televised debates begin on Thursday, in the event that Mr. Kerry does not do well against Mr. Bush.
One reason Mr. Gore may have run better among absentee voters, Mr. Vilsack speculated, was that most of them did not witness what were widely considered lackluster showings by the vice president in that year's debates.
David Roederer, the Bush chairman in Iowa, asserted that the absentee campaign "won't mean a thing" in the end.
"If you vote them early, you can't vote them late, because you only have so many supporters," Mr. Roederer said, expressing doubt that the Democrats could encourage many new voters signed up. "We're concentrating on Election Day, and we'll beat them there.
"If they get 40,000 more absentees, it won't be decisive. If the spread goes up to 100,000, of course, that would be a different story."
I lived in Iowa and still have a lot of family there. There are a lot of yellow dog Dems there and this would not surprise me at all. The only hope is that Kerry keeps running so far to the left even they will be offended.
Sec of state home page
Voter index
Form Index
Go to the 4th form, which is the "Application for Ballot by Mail". After completing the ballot, send it to the Early Voting Clerk for your precinct. You can get the address from the Voter Information @ 1-800-252-8683. This may take quite a while, as I was on hold for about 15 minutes.
Kerry Pins Hopes in Iowa on Big Vote From Absentees Arrowhead1952's post (#42):
Just the right thread to post the links to download the absentee forms for Texas Sec of State. Please ping any and all lists you have for Texas FReepers.
Sec of state home page
Voter index
Form IndexGo to the 4th form, which is the "Application for Ballot by Mail". After completing the ballot, send it to the Early Voting Clerk for your precinct. You can get the address from the Voter Information @ 1-800-252-8683. This may take quite a while, as I was on hold for about 15 minutes.
Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my Texas ping list!. . .don't be shy.
No, you don't HAVE to be a Texan to get on this list!
Full Texas Ping List
Thanks, I just sent this to my American cousins in Abu Dabi. Thats 2 votes for President Bush right there.
I hope the GOP has been working hard on getting absentee ballots out.
I am fairly certain that the GOP has neglected getting out early voters and absentee voters. We know that GOP registration has lagged far behind Kerry's this year.
There are a lot of yellow dog Dems
Those are the base of the Tom Harkin boosters. Also, IA has a large labor vote, doesn't it, though it was of no help to Richard A. Gephardt in the caucus in January.
Scary --- I wonder how much fraud there is with the absentee voting system.
[In the interest of full disclosure]
Excellent !! :^D
I bet we would all be surprised if we learned how much.
I don't like the smell of this. I am 100% certain that what is going on is that the RATS are going into nursing homes and registering the comatose to vote and then filling out the absentee ballots in their names and sending them in. I have no proof of this, but I saw something similar in NY as a poll watcher in the Bronx.
These RATS are so despicable. GWB better be up at least 8-10 on election day in order to counter the fraud factor.
Have faith FReepers!
I will have faith when I see the RAT fraud machine indicted and prosecuted.
I am so hoping for an avalanche this year. I want to rub it into every RATS stupid face I see.
I hope you get your wish!
Thanks for the ping.
Being optimistice is nice but as the great Ronald Reagan said....'Trust BUT verify!
We MUST get everyone to vote AND volunteer to work at the polls as an observer, so we can watch out for fraudulent voting.
I'll be doin' the early voting thing here, as always.In the early voting, I can usually get in and out in a whopping 10 minutes most
times. I go either before or after lunch when there aren't many people there.That should start in about 3 weeks, I think.
Mr. Kerry isn't even well known to Mr. Kerry ("If it's Tuesday, I must be anti-war"). How can Iowans presume to "know" him at all?
Democrats - the party of voter fraud.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.