Tom Green County Early Voting Down 9 Percent from 2012 Levels

 

SAN ANGELO, TX — At the end of the first week of early voting for the U.S. Presidential Election Nov. 8, Tom Green County continues to report lower turnout than this time in 2012.

Early voting commenced at the Edd B. Keyes Building downtown Monday, Oct. 22 when 1,642 voted. Turnout increased averaging about 3 percent per day until Friday Oct. 28, when turnout was 1,906 ballots cast.

So far, 8,931 ballots have been cast. At the end of the first week of early voting in 2012, 9,793 ballots had been cast.

This is about nine percent less turnout than the first week of early voting in 2012. Just over 20,000 of 37,040 voters in Tom Green County voted early in 2012.

Three factors may be in play. The first is most revealing. Since 2012, the county has transitioned to a new voting format called voting centers. As part of that plan, four early voting centers were eliminated, including the Assembly of God (1442 Edmund), Plaza Del Sol Apartments (4375 Oak Grove), River Place Apartments (501 S. Irene), and the Victory Christian Center (1620 Sunset Dr.). The only place to vote early in the county this year is downtown at the Edd B. Keyes building (113 W. Beauregard Ave.). Each of the additional early voting centers accounted for 100-300 in additional turnout, though some of that spillover demand has transitioned to the Keyes building.

Voter Turnout in Previous San Angelo Elections
ElectionRegistered VotersTotal Votes CastTurnout
2012 Presidential622223704059.53%
March 1, 2016 Primary610761986132.52%
May 7, 2016 Police Chief536551029819.19%
July 2, 2016 Police Chief Runoff510751013019.83%

Sightings of long lines at the Keyes building are keeping many away from voting early. If the upward trend of early voters continues, currently growing at about 4 percent per day, waiting may not be the best option to avoid the crowds.

The second factor may be less excitement in down ballot races. In 2012, Senator Ted Cruz was the Republican darling facing a Democratic Party challenger named Paul Sadler (Sadler lost 71.6-24.97 percent). Congressman Mike Conaway faced Democrat Jim Riley (Riley lost 74-23 percent). Republican Mitt Romney carried the county over President Barrack Obama 73-25 percent.

This year, there is no senate race, and Congressman Conaway is running unopposed.

The 2016 race for Tom Green County Sheriff is Democrat Walter Bryant’s do-over. He lost to Republican incumbent Sheriff David Jones 70-26 percent in 2012.

The final reason may be a looser affinity of voters to the candidates for president. A contingent of Republican voters who claim the mantle of “true conservatives” may be as repelled by Republican nominee Donald Trump’s antics as all 25 percent of Tom Green County who are Democrats. Likewise, Democrats may be waiting for the fifth shoe to drop in Democrat Hillary Clinton’s drama over her private email server before deciding for whom to vote or to just stay home.

In the major metropolitan centers of Texas, early voting this year is outstripping 2012, according to the Texas Tribune's data. For example, in Bexar County (San Antonio) early voting turnout is up 27 percent.

Whatever the reason, whether it’s Tom Green County's long lines, not enough decisions to make, or indecision on Trump v. Clinton, time is running out.

The last day of early voting is Friday, Nov. 4. The Keyes building is open 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. throughout the rest of early voting.

On Tuesday, Nov. 8, Election Day, polls will be open from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m.

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The trend, broadly, is that more Democratic counties have seen bigger increases in how many votes have been cast by this point in the election. On average, counties that backed President Obama in 2012 have seen an increase of 65 percent in early voting so far. Counties that backed Mitt Romney have seen an increase of 44 percent. Put more starkly, there are 214,000 more votes in counties Obama so far in 2016 and only 110,000 more votes than 2012 in counties that Romney won.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/10/27/how-the-early-vote-is-shaping-up-in-texas-nevada-and-florida/

Congressman Conaway is NOT running unopposed. There is a Libertarian candidate on the ballot: Nicholas Landholt

Concho, Mon, 10/31/2016 - 16:25

Joe -
Voter turnout is always a concern. I would think having only one location open is a concern. I was going to vote early last Wednesday around 1030. The line was all the way back to the Beauregard entrance. I will go another time and almost suspect the wait will be shorter, depending upon location, on November 8.

Burying the lead, I am concerned about the number of registered voters as you show them. What is the cause of the drop of 7421 registered voters from March 1 to May 7? Couple that with an additional 2580 from May 7 to July 2. If your numbers are correct it would seem the Voter Registration office struck over 16% of the rolls in four months. Is this something out of the Trump playbook?

Using your numbers, the early voting is actually up about 2%. Based on registered voters in 2012 and 9793 early votes that would be 15.7% of the voters casting early ballots. Using July 2 registered voters and 8931 early votes would be 17.4% voting early.

live, Mon, 10/31/2016 - 21:31

The March 1 Primary was countywide. The May 7 election was just within the city limits. The May 7 police chief race included the precincts around Wall ISD for their election. The July 2 runoff excluded Wall ISD. I am unsure of the reduction of RV between 2012 and the Primary Election in 2016. 

Concho, Wed, 11/02/2016 - 17:33

Got in line this afternoon as it extended to the Beauregard entrance. Took 25 minutes to get to point of casting a ballot. Biggest bottleneck is the check-in process. Many empty machines waiting for someone to vote. I asked Vona Hudson, Election Administrator, whose idea it was to limit early voting to one location. Her reply: "We have always done it this way" which contradicts your comment concerning reduction since 2012. Clearly given the number of voters it would be better to have one or two additional locations to make it more convenient for voters. At the very least, additional check-in people would speed up the lines.

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