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November 01, 2010 11:49 PM UTC

Ballot Return Update (Monday)

  • 16 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

The latest batch of ballot counts has been released by the Colorado Secretary of State’s office. Click here for the full update.

Click here for Friday’s numbers.

As of November 1, 2010

1,093,600 Total Ballots Counted

(There are 3,282,855 total registered voters in Colorado as of Oct. 1, 2010)

Democrats: 383,925

– 36% of all registered Democrats

– 48% of “active” Democrats

Republicans: 445,445

– 41% of all registered Republicans

– 52% of “active” Republicans”

Unaffiliated: 257,645

– 23% of total registered Unaffiliated voters

– 34% of “active” Unaffiliated voters

We have crossed the 1 million vote threshold, which means that there are roughly 800,000 votes that have yet to be cast or counted as of this posting. Unaffiliated voters are still lagging behind in turnout. Republicans are still voting in a higher percentage than Democrats, but that’s pretty standard for Colorado mid-term elections.  

Comments

16 thoughts on “Ballot Return Update (Monday)

  1. I don’t think that’s close enough to save any contested Dems except Hick and Perlmutter.  That said, Bennet’s in with a shot, based on the “exit” polling showing that people who have actually voted are supporting him at a greater rate than most poll’s sample of “likely” voters.

  2. a Democrat needs about 63% of the unaffiliated vote to win a statewide race.

    If Democrats continue to their tendency to be disproportionately last minute voters, and overperform a little on election day relative to early voting and mail-in ballots, than a Democrat needs a little less of the unaffiliated vote to win a statewide race.

    Of course, the flip side of that is that where unaffiliated voters are relatively random and don’t have a strong preference one way or the other, the Republican will win in a statewide race.

    The voter turnout percentages also suggest to the extent that there are typical across the state, that there will be few upsets in state or federal legislative districts, or counties, with a strong partisan leaning one way or the other.

    1. … than the R wins D votes. I think the odds are decent (if I remember cross-tabs I’d seen from some Buck/Bennet polls) that Bennet will win, say, 5% more Rs than Buck wins Ds — which would give Bennet back 40,000 votes, or 2% of the total vote count.

      1. moderate Rs defecting to bennet more than right-wing ds to buck.

        Bear in mind that the polls showing Bennet up by a point or two persist even with Rs. casting a greater share of their vote as an early vote.

        It’s still up for grabs but the numbers to date are cautiously optimistic for Ds, who have a much better gotv than buck and whatever passes for a Republican party these days.

        1. V-ger, I thought I just disagreed with you. Now it’s clear you’ve gone off the deep end. You’re going to be in for a rude awakening tomorrow night.

    1. b/c we’ve all been quoting polls showing that of those who already voted, it’s Bennet 50 to Buck 45 or thereabouts — those are pollsters asking hundreds of folks in random samples, and two such polls have come up with about the same margin.

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