With eye on 2024, Republicans push for early voting despite Trump's
rhetoric
Send a link to a friend
[October 26, 2023]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin has been crisscrossing the
state ahead of November's legislative elections with a central message
for Republicans: Vote early.
That exhortation is a far cry from what voters have heard since 2020
from former President Donald Trump, who continues to claim falsely that
mail and absentee ballots are rampant with fraud.
But after losing the White House in 2020 and failing to capture the U.S.
Senate last year, Republican leaders in Virginia and nationally are
promoting early voting in the run-up to the state's Nov. 7 election -
and with an eye toward 2024, when the presidency and control of Congress
will be at stake.
Trump remains the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination
despite a litany of legal troubles, and Republican lawmakers across the
country have pushed new voting restrictions in the wake of his false
allegations. That could make it difficult for the party to deliver a
coherent message on early voting.
The Virginia elections will show whether Republican voters are
listening.
Youngkin's political action committee, Spirit of Virginia, has invested
a seven-figure sum in the early voting push, advisers said, working in
partnership with Republican legislative leaders and the Republican State
Leadership Committee, the party's national group dedicated to supporting
state-level candidates.
His "Secure Your Vote" bus tour has taken him to every corner of the
state, where he has warned Republicans that failing to take advantage of
early voting, either by mail or in person, cedes ground to Democrats.
"For those of you who haven't voted early, shame on you," Youngkin said
at a Monday rally in Henrico County, an area with several competitive
races. "Go vote!"
Meanwhile, the Republican National Committee (RNC) launched a 2024
initiative called "Bank Your Vote" earlier this year. The program
encourages early voting and even vows to use "ballot harvesting" where
legal – a derisive term Republicans have employed to criticize the
practice by which groups collect and return multiple ballots on behalf
of voters.
In an advertisement that aired during the first Republican presidential
debate in August, RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said into the camera:
"When Republicans vote early, we win."
For his part, Trump has sent mixed signals. He is urging his supporters
to vote early and "harvest" ballots in order to "beat the Democrats at
their own game," as his campaign put it in one fundraising email, while
insisting that mail-in voting is rigged.
"I will secure our elections, and our goal will be one-day voting with
paper ballots and voter ID," Trump told a campaign rally in Iowa last
week. "But until then, Republicans have to compete and we have to win."
Absentee and mail voting were more widely adopted during the coronavirus
pandemic, as election officials sought ways to allow people to cast
ballots more safely.
With Trump railing against the practice, Democrats have increased their
edge in early voting.
[to top of second column]
|
Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin speaks
during his election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia,
U.S., November 3, 2021. REUTERS/ Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
In 2018, Democrats accounted for 41% of early votes in the 24 states
that provide partisan data, compared to 35.1% for Republicans,
according to the U.S. Elections Project at the University of
Florida. In 2022, that gap widened, with Democrats accounting for
42.5% of early ballots and Republicans 33.8%.
Banking early votes not only ensures those ballots will count –
eliminating the risk that voters might skip Election Day due to bad
weather or other issues – but allows campaigns to devote resources
more efficiently by targeting supporters they know have not yet
voted.
TOO CLOSE TO CALL
Both Virginia legislative chambers are up for grabs next month.
Democrats currently hold a narrow majority in the state Senate, and
Republicans have a similarly slim majority in the state House of
Delegates.
A Republican sweep would pave the way for Youngkin to enact his
agenda, including a 15-week abortion limit. But it could also
validate his push for early voting in a state that allows ballots to
be cast up to 45 days before Election Day, among the most expansive
of any state.
Republicans and Democrats agree his investment has already paid some
dividends.
In a briefing with reporters last week hosted by the Democratic
Legislative Campaign Committee, the party's campaign arm for
legislative candidates, officials said the early vote data in
Virginia points to an extremely close election.
Tom Bonier, who runs the Democratic polling and data firm
TargetSmart, said Republican turnout is higher in swing districts
than in 2021 or 2022, likely due to Youngkin's push.
"Republicans have invested millions of dollars, and they are showing
some gains from that," Bonier said.
Democratic turnout is also matching or exceeding the levels from
2021 and 2022, according to Bonier. He said the vast majority of
Republican ballots appear to be from "super" voters – those who can
be counted on to vote in every election.
But Youngkin advisers said their data showed the early vote campaign
had brought in ballots from low-propensity voters as well. And they
cautioned that Republicans, who historically turn out in greater
numbers on Election Day, do not need to equal Democratic early vote
numbers to be competitive.
"By every indication, we are hitting the mark – driving Republican
turnout in early voting and bringing Republicans who typically just
vote in presidential or gubernatorial elections off the sidelines
and in the game to win this election," Dave Rexrode, a senior
Youngkin adviser, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Nathan Layne;
Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Deepa Babington)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |