Voters in Wisconsin headed to the polls on Tuesday for the first day of early in-person voting as 17 million voters nationwide have already cast ballots in the contentious election.
The onset of in-person absentee voting has drawn campaigns to the state. Former President Barack Obama will appear with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz in Madison on Oct. 22, in support of Vice President Kamala Harris. Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), the running mate of former President Donald Trump, spoke in Waukesha on Oct. 20.
As of Oct. 22, 17 million voters have already cast ballots in the 2024 election, according to the University of Florida Election Lab. Republicans are closing the gap in early voting totals. In the states that report party registration for early voting, Democrats lead Republicans by 11.3 percentage points. Around the same time in the 2020 election, Republicans were trailing by 27.6 percentage points.
In-person absentee voting is just one form of absentee voting in America’s Dairyland.
More than 590,000 absentee mail ballots had been sent out to voters across the state. Nearly 325,000 of them had been returned, according to the Wisconsin Elections Commission, as of Oct. 20,
Wisconsinites must show photo ID to cast their in-person absentee ballots.
FiveThirtyEight’s polling average for Wisconsin gives Harris a narrow edge of 0.3 points as of Oct. 21. RealClearPolling’s similar aggregator has Trump up by 0.2 points.
At the same time in 2016 and 2022, Trump was losing in FiveThirtyEight’s Wisconsin polling average by a much greater margin—by 8 points to Hillary Clinton in 2016 and by 6.3 points to President Joe Biden in 2020. Similarly, historical averages from RealClearPolitics show Clinton leading Trump by 6.5 points and Biden leading Trump by 4.6 points on Oct. 21, 2024.
In both 2016 and 2020, the state was decided by margins of less than 1 percent.
Early Voting Surges in Battlegrounds
Arizona’s early in-person voting began more than a week ago, on Oct. 9. Early in-person voting in Georgia kicked off on Oct. 15. Next came Hurricane Helene-battered North Carolina, on Oct. 17, followed by Nevada, on Oct. 19.
Michigan is, in a limited sense, the last of those crucial states. A mandatory early in-person voting period begins Oct. 26, nine days ahead of Nov. 5, Election Day. Yet communities there are permitted to initiate early voting from on Oct. 7, 29 days ahead of Election Day.
In the state’s most populous city, Detroit, early in-person voting started Oct. 19. Harris visited the Motor City to campaign with Detroit-born musician Lizzo.
The enthusiasm among voters has been evident in Georgia, which set a new record for turnout on the first day of early in person voting. North Carolina also clocked record numbers as early voting commenced.
From The Epoch Times