The Weekly Wonk:  Onondaga County Early & Absentee Voting 2023 General Election

Welcome back to the #WeeklyWonk.  This weekly column investigates an electoral aspect of Onondaga County or New York State. I am currently in my end of year review. This has been slightly delayed as the election was not certified because of the county-wide hand count for the County Clerk race. However, we are just in time to wrap up the 2023 General Election. Last week I talked about how Democrats fared electorally in Onondaga County; this week I start to dive into the states form the election. This week I investigate Early and Absentee voting and next week I look at Election Day and the overall Turnout numbers for 2023.

We had 90,812 voters take part in the 2023 Election, though not all of those voters had their ballot counted. Election Day remains the king for voter preference with 72,600 Election Day Check-ins on our Knowink Poll Pads. Early Voting is the next popular method with 12,680 voters, absentee had 5,103 voters who returned ballots, and another 429 voters cast affidavit ballots. Despite some of the changing rhetoric (though not action) of the NY State GOP, Democrats are still dominating Early and Absentee voting. In Early Voting Democrats made up 51% of the electorate, while the GOP made up 25% of the voters. Absentees tell a similar story though the GOP did a little better. Democrats made up 49% of the electorate and the GOP made up 29% of the electorate. The Democrats over performed their 38% registration rate, while the GOP was remarkably close to their 26.9% registration rate. The story here is the drop off of the non-enrolled voter. Non-enrolled voters make up 29% of the registration but just 20% of the Early Vote and 17% of the absentee.

We are now starting to get a good sense of how #earlyvoting is growing when it comes to the local, odd-year elections. Local odd-year elections have extremely low turnout, and their voters are more informed and more traditional, so they prefer the traditional Election Day voting method. We are still seeing a steady tick up in the raw voter counts as well as percentage of voters. In 2019 EV was 8,462 voters, and 7.87% of the vote, 2021 9,721 voters and 10.31% of the vote, and finally this year 12,680 voters and 13.96% of the vote. It will be harder to measure impact non even years until we get a few more cycles for Presidential and mid-term separately. The pandemic in 2020 is probably an aberration as well.

This is the second year we have had 10 Early Voting sites, up from 6 in 2019, 2020, and 2021 when the legislature forced Onondaga County to have more. We are starting to see we have four tiers of Early Voting sites. We have two small sites, Syracuse Community Connections (3%) & Beauchamp Library (3%) that serve under resourced communities. Four medium sites with Lafayette (7%). OCC Muloy Hall (8%), Armond Magnarelli 8%), & Lysander (8%) that provide closer sites to suburban populations. Two large sites Fire Station (12% and Clay Town Hall (15%) that serve large suburban populations. Finally, Dewitt Town Hall stands alone as a super site with 28% of the voters. The additional site has worked to take loads off Clay and Cicero by Dewitt remains the high-volume site winning four of the last five generals and every primary it participated in.

We are now starting to get a good sense of how #earlyvoting is growing when it comes to the local, odd-year elections. Local odd-year elections have extremely low turnout, and their voters are more informed and more traditional, so they prefer the traditional Election Day voting method. We are still seeing a steady tick up in the raw voter counts as well as percentage of voters. In 2019 EV was 8,462 voters, and 7.87% of the vote, 2021 9,721 voters and 10.31% of the vote, and finally this year 12,680 voters and 13.96% of the vote. It will be harder to measure impact non even years until we get a few more cycles for Presidential and mid-term separately. The pandemic in 2020 is probably an aberration as well.

Some NYS law changes are increasing the number of affidavits we receive but also making it harder to reject them. Example of those law changes are address changes from out of county no longer need a court order if they are registered in another county in NY State. In fact, we only had three court orders this year, and all were people not registered in NYS. Also, voters who requested but did not vote by absentee now have to vote by affidavit. This has brought the numbers up but also brought the valid numbers of ballots cast to 429 in 2023. A whopping 406 went under bipartisan review and validated. That is an acceptance rate of 94.64%. That is the highest I have on record going back to 2009.

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That does not mean that ballots were not invalidated. Both Absentees and Affidavit ballots were thrown out for a variety of reasons. For Absentees 157 ballots or 3.08% were rejected. Sixty-eight were returned not timely, or with postmarks after Election Day. Another forty-six did not return a cure affidavit that was sent to them for a variety of reasons but mostly signature mismatch., twenty-two voters were deceased when we canvassed the ballot, but presumably alive when they requested and filled out (we routinely look at these to determine if further investigation is needed). Eight voters did not return their Oath envelope that contains their signature, and we sent them a second ballot, however those were not returned. Ten others had assorted reasons. For Affidavits only twenty-six ballots were rejected. Eleven voted in person (usually at an old polling place). d thus the. affidavit was rejected.  Five voters did not properly fill out the envelope. Four voters were not registered. Two voters returned absentees and 1 Voter came in and voted Early. More ballots were rejected during the hand count which we will analyze next week

That is, it for this #weeklywonk. Next week I will rush to get the Election Day and Overall, Voter turnout investigation done before the holidays. I will then take some time off till the new year as we start to focus on 2024. Enjoy the holidays and remember to subscribe to dustinczarny.com for all content and election news updates.

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