- Oct 9, 1999
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The first thing that came to my mind (and also asked by the story) was "are Democrats running out and voting but more Republicans will be voting on election day?". I don't know if this trend will continue or if it's an early route only to be beaten by a 4th quarter late game winner by the GOP.
Your thoughts?
The first thing that came to my mind (and also asked by the story) was "are Democrats running out and voting but more Republicans will be voting on election day?". I don't know if this trend will continue or if it's an early route only to be beaten by a 4th quarter late game winner by the GOP.
Your thoughts?
A look at early voting in key states:
_Florida: About 2.6 million people have already voted in a state where absentee ballots overwhelmingly favored President Bush in the razor-thin 2000 election. Among those voting so far this year, 45 percent are registered Democrats and 39 percent Republicans.
_North Carolina: About 1.6 million people have already voted ? 54 percent are registered Democrats and 29 percent are Republicans. About 100,000 newly registered voters have signed up and voted at North Carolina's one-stop voting centers, McDonald said. Among them, Democrats outnumbered Republicans by about 2-1, he said.
_Iowa: About 370,000 people have already voted ? 49 percent are registered Democrats and 29 percent are Republicans.
_Colorado: About 815,000 people have voted ? 39 percent are registered Democrats and 37 percent are Republicans.
_Nevada: About 342,000 people have already voted in Clark and Washoe Counties, which contain nearly 90 percent of the state's population. Among those voters, 53 percent are registered Democrats and 30 percent are Republicans.
_New Mexico: About 111,000 people have voted in Bernalillo County, the state's largest. Among them, 55 percent are registered Democrats and 33 percent are Republicans.
_Georgia: Black voters make up about 35 percent of those who have already voted ? a big increase from the 2004 election, when 25 percent of the state's electorate was black. Blacks voted for Obama by ratio of 9-1 in Georgia's Democratic primary this year.
