In any given election, the proportion of
individuals with certain characteristics in the electorate that end up voting can
be to the advantage or disadvantage of parties and candidates. A crude method to
determine this begins with the concept of a normal vote, or one where turnout essentially
matches the characteristics of the aggregate of registered voters.
Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
26.10.16
LA early voting initial results favor Republicans
Varying by degree only in whether early voting has matured
within the electorate, Republicans initially have
received good news from the practice this election cycle in Louisiana.
Now in its eighth year in the state, the last
round of statewide elections topped the one-fifth mark for proportion of vote
that came prior to election day. After so much experience, to understand how
early voting may signal the direction of an election, we must consider whether
it has come to approximate final returns, or whether it remains a phenomenon
unrepresentative of actual outcomes.
For analytical purposes, partisanship and race
constitute the most crucial variables. Party identification, for obvious
reasons, remains a strong predictor of the vote, as does race, for historical
and societal reasons. Thus, when the actual electorate participating in a given
eleciton, for example, has a higher proportion of Republicans than reflected in
registration statistics, GOP candidates gain an advantage. Similarly, for
example, a higher proportion of blacks would bring disadvantage to that party’s
candidates.
But such an approach ignores that these variables
also stand in for other attributes that affect turnout. Most principally,
because those who identify as Republicans typically score higher in terms of
socioeconomic status – for example, are better educated than the typical
Democrat – and blacks – again with education, in this case typically less than
whites – score lower on SES, all things equal Republicans turn out at higher
rates than Democrats, and blacks at lower rates than whites.
So, an adjusted normal vote provides a better comparison
– the expectation that, all other things equal, Republicans will turn out disproportionately
higher than Democrats, and whites disproportionately higher than blacks. Again,
that holds constant all other factors – which sometimes doesn’t happen. For
example, because of the reelection bid in 2012 by Democrat Pres. Barack Obama,
who identifies as black, this mobilized blacks at an unusually high level. In
Louisiana, holding constant partisanship and reviewing the label under which
the large majority of blacks identify, in
that election white Democrats turned out at a rate of 69.31 percent, but
trailed black Democrats who voted at a rate of 70.94 percent.
If early voting has reached a state of maturation,
the proportions witnessed in early turnout would essentially match those of all
voting. That is, the typical early voter would not really differ in
characteristics from the typical election day voter. If differences persist,
then early voting is an act of political participation qualitatively different
from voting on election day and represents a substitution effect – people of
certain characteristics associated with partisanship and race are more likely
to vote early.
The problem for analysts is, like Minerva’s Owl flying
only at night, we don’t know whether maturation has been reached or a
substitution effect persists until after the election itself when the data
become available for actual turnout, meaning whether raw early voting numbers
predict the actual proportions that lead to forecasting better or worse
expectations for certain candidates and parties, or if these need adjusting to account
for a substitution effect. To make the task more complex, a dynamic within
early voting itself could exist where disproportionate turnout occurs among
groups earlier and later in the process.
Taking all of the above into consideration,
reviewing the first
day’s results of early voting (note: link accurate only through Oct. 26,
2016) should lend optimism to Republicans in Louisiana. Registration and
turnout data in Louisiana for the last presidential election in 2012 showed
Democrats turned out about a percentage point higher than their proportion of
the registered electorate, and Republicans at two-and-two-thirds higher than
that. (Other party/no party registrants turn out significantly
disproportionately lower levels, because disproportionately those who sign up
this way have less interest in politics.) Between whites and blacks, whites
turned out about 1.8 percentage points higher than their proportion among the
registered, and blacks turned out about half that lower.
Comparing actual turnout to early
voting in the 2012 election, Democrats turned out early at about
one-and-three-quarters points proportionally higher than on election day while
Republicans’ rate was about two-and-a-half times higher than that. (Other
party/no party registrants turned out early significantly less proportionally.)
As far as race goes, around 3 percentage points more blacks voted early than
who would on election day, while for whites around 2.5 percentage points fewer voted
early than who would on election day.
So if the same dynamics held this election, we
should see similar kinds of numbers. We don’t, at least from the first day’s
numbers: GOP early voting is about 3.5 points higher in 2016 than 2012, while
Democrat early voting is almost the same lower; and for whites early voting is
around 6 points higher, while black early voting is slightly more in the opposite
direction.
If we assume the phenomenon has matured, white final
turnout will be about 4 points higher in 2016 than 2012 and black turnout about
the same lower. Under a similar assumption, Democrat final turnout will be
almost two points higher, but swamped by an almost eight point increase for
Republicans.
Continuing to assume a substitution effect, Republicans
look still more advantaged. A 16.5 percent proportionate gap between Democrats
and Republicans in 2012 early voting, which translated to a 19 percent
advantage on election day, this year starts at only 10 percent which would
predict just a difference of just 11.5 percent on election day. A 40.5 percentage
point higher white proportion in 2012 early voting ended up as a gap of 36 on election
day, but with the early voting initial difference having ballooned to 43 points
this year, this portends a gap of over 38 percent on election day.
A relatively higher proportion of 7.5 percent
Republican and 2 percent white on election day in 2016 as opposed to 2012 could
spell some difficulties for down-ballot Democrat candidates. While GOP presidential
nominee Donald Trump should triumph
easily over Democrat nominee Hillary
Clinton, a much more competitive Senate race could see two Republicans
making an inevitable runoff instead of one candidate from each party. The same
dynamic could play out in the Fourth Congressional District contest. For local
races, the effect would magnify, as those kinds of contests typically have
fewer defections from partisanship in making vote choices.
Should the first day results replicate across the
entirety of the early voting period to its conclusion, Louisiana Democrats
could find themselves in for a long night the week after.
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