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Absentee Voting At All Time High In La. Presidential Primary

Courtesy: Chuck Smith / Red River Radio News

 LA. PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY–  Despite months of delays the Presidential Primary election in Louisiana is finally underway.  It’s been a bumpy road for the primary facing concerns around racial inequality and the novel coronavirus pandemic.  Voting by mail has been a hot and somewhat controversial topic as there’s been more demand than ever for mail-in voting to help avoid infection by the Coronavirus.  Republicans have been recalcitrant to extend mail-in voting saying doing so encourages voter fraud although Republican Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin has gone on record saying such instances are very rare.  In-person early voting is normally a week at this time but  was expanded to two weeks for the July primary.

Voters were showing up to vote in significant numbers and  absentee ballots are still being accepted.  According to Louisiana’s Secretary of State : more than 196,000 people have voted  in Louisiana’s Presidential Primary before  Election Day.  Of those –more than 103,000 were in-person  votes, that's already about 30,000 greater than it was for the 2016 presidential race.  But the real story is mail-in voting.  John  Couvillion  is the founder of JMC Analytics a group that monitors elections and voting habits.

"For the mail-in voting, it's up to 83,000, which not only is four times the volume of the 2016 presidential primary," Couvillion said. "But that 83,000 is an all-time record in terms of the number of people who voted by mail breaking a record set by the 2016 presidential race of about 60,000."

And since that interview the mail-in voting count has increased to over 93,000.  So what are the early voting trends and what story could be gleaned by the voting demographics?  Couvillion has been focusing on this not just in Louisiana but other states as well.                                    

"The real impact, in my opinion, is I saw elevated black turnout here in Louisiana and in the Georgia primary," Couvillion explained "that was a few weeks ago because those are some of the few states that actually measure [the race a person is] registered as. I think of not only the three “blue wall” states that Donald Trump barely won, that perhaps with elevated Black turnout that could have been flipped in 2016."

Of those who have voted thus far in the Louisiana Primary -- more than  113,000 were Democrat,   71,000 were Republican,  and 10,000 were listed as “Other” party affiliation.  Regular  in- person voting for the Louisiana Primary is July 11th.  Public Radio WRKF in Baton Rouge contributed to this story.

Chuck Smith brings more than 30 years' broadcast and media experience to Red River Radio. He began his career as a radio news reporter and transitioned to television journalism and newsmagazine production. Chuck studied mass communications at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia and motion picture / television production at the University of California at Los Angeles. He has also taught writing for television at York Technical College in Rock Hill, South Carolina and video / film production at Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport.