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Content from our friends over at The Collin County Observer

Monday, October 27, 2008

Collin County voting records debunks “Limbaugh effect”

Earlier this year, Collin County Democrats turned out in unheard of numbers for the Primary election, outnumbering Republican voters for the first time in a generation.

A number of local Republicans, at a loss to explain the large Democratic primary turnout, cite Rush Limbaugh's appeal to conservatives to vote in the Democratic primary for Barack Obama, because ol' Rush thought that McCain would easily defeat the black candidate.

Most 2008 democratic primary voters were first time primary voters. They had never voted in any party’s primary. For the first time, these closet Dems were given a real choice at a primary that mattered. Is it a surprise they were motivated to vote?

Many were first time voters. Less than 3% had ever voted in a GOP primary, and less than 1% had voted in more than one GOP primary.

Let's look at the facts (all statistics are Collin County only).

* 72,727 Democrats voted in their primary. That was 19.1% of all registered voters. Barack Obama won garnering 55.3%.

* 51,887 Republicans for 13.6% of registered voters. John McCain won a plurality of 47.73%.

Looking at just the Democratic voters:

* Only 2,102 (2.9%) of them voted in the 2006 GOP Primary.

* 625 (0.8%) had previously voted in the 2006 and the 2004 GOP Primary

* 63,112 (87%) had never voted in ANY primary.

* 12,781 (18%) had not voted in any major election.

The statistics show that Republicans did not vote in the Democratic primary in any great number. The “Limbaugh” call to arms failed. My interpretation of the data is that the Obama / Clinton duel inspired a huge number of usually apathetic or disenfranchised citizens to vote. This interpretation is further strengthened by the addition of 42,273 of new registered Collin County voters in 2008 – 2,640 of them voted in the Democratic primary, while only 1,094 voted in the GOP primary.

The conclusion is inescapable – in 2008, the Democratic Party offered the voters a meaningful choice; a choice that was critical to the Presidential race. The Democrats offered the voters two charismatic candidates who appealed to disenfranchised voters – and those voters went to the polls and cast their ballot in the primary of their choice.

The question still remains whether these same non-traditional voters will return to the polls for the general election.

During the first four days of early voting, the Republican voters were more likely to have cast their ballot, but the margin was a narrow one. While 24.1% of Republicans had already voted, only 23.6% of the Democrats had. The small margin, coupled with the much larger Democratic numbers mean that even though Republicans are more likely to vote, they are being outnumbered by registered Democrats - and by a wide margin.

After 6 days of early voting (through Saturday), 79,350 voters had cast their ballot. I have been able to analyze 75,513 of them:

* 33.1% (24,992) were registered Democrats

* 23.4% (17,694) were registered Republicans

* 43.5% (32,827) did not vote in the primary

As in most elections, the deciding voters will be the Independents. In Collin County, we can expect the majority of these Independents to vote for Republican candidates. The big question is, "How many of those Independents will vote Republican in 2008?".

We can gain some inferences from looking at previous races.

In the 2004 Presidential election, 222,048 independent (non-primary) voters cast their ballots - 72% of them for Republican George Bush. However, in the more recent 2006 Precinct 2 commissioners court race, only 65% of the Independents voted for the Republican incumbent, Jerry Hoagland.

Many think the key factor will be the newly registered voters. In the primaries, these voters chose the Democrats more than 2 to 1 over the Republicans.

To win in 2008, the Republicans will have to keep at least 55% of the non-primary Independents. If you factor in the newly registered, the Republicans must hold on to over 60% of the Independent vote.

We'll all know if they did on November 4.


Pegasus News content partner - The Collin County Observer


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RODOM, says:

I think you're confused about this "Limbaugh effect" of which you speak. I've never heard of this Limbaugh effect, and, as a regular listener to his show, I've never heard him use this term. However, he did help orchestrate something he called "operation chaos," but that effort was aimed at getting Republicans to vote for Hillary Clinton, not Obama, in order to keep the race going after Obama appeared to be winning in the primaries.

Anonymous

1 year, 1 month ago
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Bill Baumbach, says:

Rodom, You are right and I did correct my factual error on what Limbaugh called for. In a correction I published this afternoon, I wrote "A number of local Republicans, at a loss to explain the large Democratic primary turnout, cite Rush Limbaugh's appeal to conservatives to vote in the Democratic primary for Hillary Clinton, because ol' Rush thought that Clinton would "bloody up" Obama."

The error was mine, but it doesn't change the numbers.

Bill Baumbach

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1 year, 1 month ago
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DC, says:

Try adding some measures of dispersion with your point estimates.

Anonymous

1 year, 1 month ago
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momzilla, says:

I'm a registered Republican who voted to nominate Obama in Tarrant County.

My reasoning was that my party was already stuck with McCain, to my dismay, that I knew I wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton, and that I didn't know enough about Obama. I wanted to preserve for myself a legitimate choice in November.

Anonymous

1 year, 1 month ago
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