Larry Sabato takes a look at the early voting going on throughout the country:
We’ve been monitoring early voting in states such as North Carolina, Georgia, Nevada, and Colorado and it is abundantly clear that registered Democrats are turning out at extraordinary rates, at least so far, and Republicans are not. Take the Tar Heel State, for example. Already 629,296 people have voted early, well above the pace of 2004. Democrats are over 56% of the 2008 total, compared to just 45% in 2004. African-Americans are about 30% of the early vote total, compared to only 17% in 2004. (Our thanks to Crystal Ball contributor Justin Sizemore for this data.) True enough, registered Democrats could be voting for McCain, and if you are a Republican and want to whistle past the graveyard, feel free to believe that. Also true: Late votes count just as much as early votes, but the early voting disparity between the parties in many states is another indication of the “enthusiasm gap” favoring Democrats–a phenomenon we have observed and written about here at the Crystal Ball since the start of the nominating season in early January.
And there are signs that voter turnout as a whole will reach numbers that we haven’t seen in decades:
In the nation as a whole, there are approximately 212 million people who are age 18 and over, a universe that constitutes “potential voters” in the presidential election. It is looking increasingly likely that a massive turnout is occurring, with voting already underway in some form almost everywhere. In 2000 we saw 105.4 million people vote in the Bush-Gore contest, a mere 51.2% of the potential electorate. By 2004, when Bush faced off against John Kerry, the turnout soared to 122.3 million, about 60% of the potential voters. This year we will be surprised if turnout isn’t between 135 million and 140 million out of the 212 million universe of voters. A turnout like this, representing two-thirds of the electorate, would even exceed that of 1960, when 63% of adult Americans voted (age 21 and up, at that time). The 1960 turnout represented the modern high water mark for voter turnout.
If Sabato is even close to being right about that, then it’s going to be a very busy day on November 4th.
More importantly, it’s going to be a bad day for the Republicans. To borrow a phrase from Joe Biden, mark my words — high turnout on Election Day in the range that Sabato is forecasting would mean not just a Republican defeat, but a Democratic blowout.
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