Elections & Voting Information Center
Elections & Voting Information Center
Menu
  • Updates
  • Research
  • Media
  • Resources
  • Team
Browse: Home » #Vote2018
You too can be an #electionscientist! R Code for processing the Texas early voting returns
November 2, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in EVIC News

The Texas returns are pretty easy to deal with, because they are reported in one place and the webpage has the results in a well formatted table.

The code below requires that you have tidyverse, rvest, and ggplot2 packages for R installed.

 

library(tidyverse)

library(rvest)

# Dates to scrape
dates18 <- c(“oct22”, “oct23”, “oct24”, “oct25”, “oct26”, “oct27”, “oct28”, “oct29”, “oct30”, “oct31”)
dates14 <- c(“oct20”, “oct21”, “oct22”, “oct23”, “oct24”, “oct25”, “oct26”, “oct27”, “oct28”, “oct29”, “oct30”, “oct31”)

# Look at the website and see how the columns are set up, create an empty data frame to load the selected dates into and name columns as you like.

Continue reading →

Early Voting Rates in Texas's 30 Largest Counties Approaching 200% of 2014 Totals Early Voting Rates in Texas’s 30 Largest Counties Approaching 200% of 2014 Totals
November 2, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in News Clips

I’ve resisted posting much about early voting totals, but hat tip to Michael McDonald, Dan Smith, and others: these totals are astounding.

Thanks to Paul Manson and the students in Political Science 377 who worked with me on the graphic.

Univision story on what we can learn from the early vote
October 31, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in News Clips

https://www.univision.com/univision-news/politics/early-voting-is-way-up-so-what-does-the-data-reveal

Early Voting over the past 20 years Early Voting over the past 20 years
October 29, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in Commentary

Early voting has been steadily increasing over the past 20 years.

While different data sources come up with slightly different estimates, the Current Population Survey’s Voting and Registration Supplement shows that the level of early voting has tripled since 1998 in midterm elections, and has gone up two and half times in presidential years.

If the levels this year are 30% or higher, it will be the most in any midterm. It’s unlikely that this year’s early voting rate will hit the 2016 level of 39%, but it’s possible that we might approach it.

 

It ain’t over until it’s over (and that may be AFTER election day)
October 29, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in News Clips

New story in the Washington Post about which states may not have finalized returns on election night. Skip the No Doz go to sleep and wait until morning (or later)!

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/politics/voting-quirks/

The Public Supports Election Officials, But Wants Them To Be Non-Partisan
October 19, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in Commentary

The governor’s race in Georgia involving the current Secretary of State, Brian Kemp, has highlighted a longstanding concern of many in the election law, election science, and election administration community–electing those public officials who oversee and administer elections. Rick Hasen captures the spirit of these concerns in his quote to Governing magazine:

It is a problem that we have partisan-elected secretaries of state as the chief election officers,” says Rick Hasen, a professor of law and political science at the University of California, Irvine.

Of course, this issue is magnified by having the chief elections officer running for higher office, simultaneous with sometimes important–and politically fraught– decisions that have to be made about eligibility for the registration rolls, times and places for early voting, allocation of election machines and poll workers, even potentially decisions about recounts (this latter issue is what caused a controversy in the Republican primary for Kansas governor involving Secretary of State Kris Kobach).

Continue reading →

Erecting Even More Barriers to Native American Voting
October 18, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in News Clips

Very interesting work by Jean Schroedel and Melissa Rogers on the difficulties faced by Native Americans living on reservations and who wish to cast a ballot.

Their study found that voting by mail, seemingly a solution to the transportation problems faced by residents on reservations, may not work as well as we might assume because of distrust of mail balloting.

This is a portion of the population that faces many significant barriers to voting. Tova Wang documented many of these barriers in a report issued by Demos nearly a decade ago, and things don’t seem to have improved.

Steven Rosenfeld, Guide to the Voting for New Voters
October 4, 2018 · by Paul Gronke · in News Clips

Steven Rosenfeld and the Independent Media Institute have created a nice Guide to Voting for 2018 targeted at new voters.

I hope everyone distributes this to younger and newly enfranchised voters!

EVIC TEAM

  • Founder & Director: Paul Gronke
  • Research Director: Paul Manson
  • Senior Communications Advisor: Michelle M. Shafer

Recent Updates

  • Voter Education: Right-Sizing Funding and Support for Local Election Officials
  • From Scarcity to Safety: Mitigating Turnover Among Local Election Officials
  • Unduly Burdensome Public Records Requests and their Effects on Local Election Officials

Elections & Voting Information Center

Reed College |3203 SE Woodstock Blvd,  Portland, OR 97202

CONTACTS

Paul Gronke, PhD | EVIC Founding Director | Reed College | gronkep@reed.edu

Paul Manson, PhD | EVIC Research Director | Portland State University | mansonp@pdx.edu

Login with Reed

Copyright © 2025 Elections & Voting Information Center

Powered by WordPress and Origin