Politics
NEW: Early Vote Reveals Signs Of Hope For GOP In Crucial Virginia Gerrymandering Referendum
Virginia voters are heading into a rare spring special election on a constitutional amendment that would allow mid-decade redistricting, and early voting is flashing one clear signal: Rural turnout is up in places expected to oppose the change, while early voting is down across the Democratic-heavy urban crescent where supporters need a big margin.
That does not automatically mean the “no” side is winning. Recent polling has consistently shown the “yes” side with a narrow edge. But the early vote suggests opponents could be positioned for an upset if Election Day turnout breaks the right way, especially in the suburbs and the Northern Virginia corridor that usually decides close statewide contests.
Early voting ended over the weekend, and the raw totals point to a turnout level that looks more like a November election than a low-energy spring vote.
Statewide early voting is running slightly behind last year’s governor’s race, but not by enough to suggest a sleepy electorate. Two days before last fall’s election, 1,439,897 Virginians had voted early. Through Sunday, 1,358,538 had already cast ballots. If Election Day holds up, overall turnout could end up rivaling last November’s 54.9% turnout, one of the highest on record for a Virginia governor’s race since “motor voter” expanded the electorate.
The catch is that turnout may be lopsided by region.
Early voting across Northern Virginia, a key power center for Democrats and a must-win area for the “yes” side, is down sharply. Alexandria’s early vote is down 25.2% from last year. Loudoun County is down 16.4%. Prince William County is down 16.2%. Fairfax County is down 13.2%. Fairfax alone is short 26,667 early votes compared with last fall, dropping from 201,490 to 174,823.
Across Northern Virginia overall, early votes fell to 379,631 from 447,109 last year, a decline of 67,478.
Early voting dips show up in other big blue and swing localities as well. Chesterfield County is down 19.2%. Virginia Beach is down 21.2%. Chesapeake saw one of the steepest drops, down 29.9%. Those are large jurisdictions where Election Day voting can still change the picture, but the early trend is a warning sign for the “yes” camp if it reflects broader enthusiasm.
Republican-leaning suburbs are not immune to the slide. Hanover County’s early vote is down 4.9%. Roanoke County is down 5.8%. For the “no” side, that makes rural strength even more important.
And rural Virginia is where the early vote is surging.
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In 70 of Virginia’s 133 localities, early voting is higher than last fall, and most of them are Republican-leaning. The increases are dramatic in percentage terms, even if the raw vote totals are smaller. Lee County is up 41.0%, from 1,585 to 2,235. Scott County is up 39.8%, from 2,560 to 3,578.
Altogether, the localities with increased early voting produced 22,361 more early ballots than last fall.
Now the big question is whether this is real momentum or just timing. Did rural voters simply shift votes earlier, draining Election Day strength? Or is it a sign of a bigger turnout wave that could blunt the margins the “yes” side typically counts on from Northern Virginia and the urban crescent?
Virginia will find out when the polls close.
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