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The Statehouse News Bureau provides educational, comprehensive coverage of legislation, elections, issues and other activities surrounding the Statehouse to Ohio's public radio and television stations.

Democratic Absentee Ballot Requests Still Outpacing Republican Applications In Ohio

Delaware County partisan absentee ballot applications received this so far this year compared to absentee ballots received by mail in all of 2016
Delaware County partisan absentee ballot applications received this so far this year compared to absentee ballots received by mail in all of 2016

Absentee ballot requests are flooding into boards of elections. Secretary of State Frank LaRose reports 1.4 million applications have been received so far, well more than the 1.2 million ballot requests received in all of 2016. And early voting doesn’t start until Oct. 6.

And again, Democrats are dominating those requests, even in Republican counties.

An analysis of only mailed-in ballots from all of 2016 compared to absentee ballot applications sent in so far in 2020 shows requests from Democratic-affiliated voters are way ahead of those from voters affiliated with the Republican Party. A reminder: Voters in Ohio aren’t registered with a party, but can be affiliated with the Democratic or Republican Party, or a voter can be unaffiliated. A voter is considered unaffiliated if there’s no record of that voter casting a partisan primary ballot for three years.

In very red Delaware County, nearly 58 percent of partisan absentee ballots requests received this year are from Democrats, with just over 42 percent from Republicans.

In 2016, 76 percent of all partisan ballots were from Republicans. This year, the number of applications sent in by Democrats is more than three times the number from Democrats who voted by mail four years ago. And the number sent in by Republicans so far is two thirds of the total of ballots mailed in by Republicans in 2016.

Portage County is a swing county, which flipped to the Republican candidate for the first time since 1988.

In all of 2016, 58 percent of partisan ballots mailed in were from Republicans, 42 percent from Democrats. So far this year, 74 percent of partisan applications have come from Democrats. And that’s two and a half times as many ballots as the total mailed in by Democrats four years ago. Requests from Republicans are two thirds of the total mailed in by GOP voters in 2016.

Montgomery County is another swing county, also voting for a Republican for president last year for the first time since 1988.

In all of 2016, two-thirds of partisan ballots were from Republicans, with one-third from Democrats. This year’s absentee ballot applications are showing the reverse. And Democrats have sent in nearly two-and-a-half times as many absentee ballot requests than all of those mailed in by Democrats four years ago. 

Erie County was the state’s 2016 bellwether: Donald Trump won the county by more than 9 points in 2016, and won the state by 8 points. It also had voted for Democrats for president since 1988. In all of 2016, Republicans sent in 57 percent of all partisan ballots.

This year, Democrats make up 69 percent of the absentee ballot requests. And this year Democrats have requested twice as many absentee ballots as all those mailed in by Democrats in 2016. Republicans have requested two thirds of the total that GOP voters returned by mail in 2016.

Mahoning County has been blue since 1968.

Four years ago, 42 percent of all the partisan ballots mailed in were from Republicans, 58 percent from Democrats. But this year, Democratic absentee ballot requests are 76 percent of all partisan applications. But the ballot requests are coming in slower in this county. So far, requests from both parties are below the total ballots mailed in four years ago.

It's unclear whether these Democratic voters are asking for early ballots because of concerns about coronavirus or delays in the postal system. And it's possible that Republicans are responding to President Trump's unfounded claims that voting by mail is problematic and are planning to cast ballots in person. But it suggests Democratic enthusiasm leading up to Election Day Nov. 3.

Early voting begins Oct. 6, when voters can send back ballots by mail, drop them off in secure ballot drop boxes or vote in person at boards of elections.

 

Copyright 2020 The Statehouse News Bureau. To see more, visit The Statehouse News Bureau.