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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
November
Voter turnout in Tuesday's
election unlikely to have been higher than in 1992
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
11/3/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Despite the widespread assumption that voter
turnout was substantially higher in the 2004 presidential election than
it was in the 2000 election, “the numbers suggest a different
story,” says Scott Althaus, a professor of speech
communication and political science
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who conducts research
on the effects of presidential campaigns.
According to vote totals as of 10 a.m. CST today, between 51 and 52
percent of voting-age Americans cast votes in Tuesday’s presidential
election. In the 2000 presidential election, by contrast, 51.2 percent
of the voting-age population cast ballots, as reported by the U.S. Census.
When turnout rates are compared for battleground and non-battleground
states, “a clear pattern emerges,” Althaus said.
“Provisional estimates for the battleground states – Florida,
Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Wisconsin – show a combined turnout of 60 percent of voting-age
Americans, compared with a combined turnout of 49 percent in all of
the other states.”
For the 2004 voting-age population totals, Althaus used data from the
U.S. Elections Project at George Mason University. For votes cast in
the 2004 presidential race, he used data from C-SPAN and CNN available
as of 10 a.m. CST today.
These numbers don’t include absentee ballots yet to be counted,
or provisional ballots yet to be validated, Althaus cautioned.
“If preliminary estimates of 120 million total votes prove accurate,
the final turnout rate for the voting-age population could reach 54
percent. In comparison, since the voting age was lowered to 18 in 1972,
the highest level of recorded turnout was registered in 1992, when 55
percent of the voting-age population cast ballots.”
Recalculating these numbers using “eligible voters” –
which excludes non-citizens and non-eligible felons, rather than voting-age
population – Althaus found that 56 percent of eligible voters
cast a vote in Tuesday’s presidential election, compared with
54.2 percent in the 2000 election.
“If preliminary estimates of 120 million votes prove accurate,
the final turnout rate among eligible voters could reach 59 percent,”
Althaus said. “In comparison, since the voting age was lowered
to 18 in 1972, the highest level of recorded turnout was registered
in 1992, when 61 percent of eligible voters cast ballots.”
When turnout rates are compared for battleground and non-battleground
states, a clear pattern still emerges using the vote-eligible standards.
“Provisional estimates for the battleground states show a combined
turnout of 65 percent of eligible voters, compared with a combined turnout
of 55 percent of eligible voters in all of the other states.”
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