Early voting is getting underway throughout the country, including in key battleground states like rgia, where more than 300,000 people voted Tuesday, the first day of early voting.
While Virginia isn’t a core battleground state this year, it does have more than two weeks of mail-in and early in-person voting already in the books, including hundreds of thousands of absentee ballots already cast. We closely monitor early-voting trends to set expectations for election night outcomes, and in Virginia a clear pattern has emerged that could be part of a national trend.
So-called consistent voters — those people who regularly show up to vote in most elections — have already made substantial use of early in-person voting in Virginia, particularly in the areas that tend to support Republican candidates. As several other states start early voting, we will be closely watching to see if similar patterns hold elsewhere, because early voting has important implications for how election results might unfold on election night.
Virginia’s first two weeks of voting by mail and early in-person voting suggest that the gap between the early vote in Republican and Democratic counties might be smaller in 2024 compared to 2020.