Absentee Voters – Some are consistently quick to vote, others are consistently slow.

by: Grebner

Sat Nov 15, 2008 at 00:16:58 AM EST

It probably shouldn’t be a surprise, but I had never looked at the question before.  I looked at all the voters listed by the Secretary of State as applying for an absentee ballot at least 30 days before the August 2008 primary and again 30 days before the 2008 November general election.  I discarded anybody who failed to return either ballot.  That left me with over 200,000 cases to examine.

The results were very clear:

As you can see (assuming my graphic actually loads!) people who returned their ballots promptly in August were much more likely to return them quickly in November also. 

Pearson’s r was about  0.47, but that understates the strength of the phenomenon, since presumably performance in both elections is actually driven by a hidden variable, and not directly to performance in the other election.  What I’m trying to say is that if we build an average response time from a large number of elections, the regression onto either of the elections I looked at in this example should approach sqrt(.47) or about 0.69 or so.

The practical point – for the two of you who are still reading – is that it probably makes sense in large campaigns to target absentee voters differently according to how quickly they typically vote, with mail and other contacts aimed first at the quick responders and then shifting over time to the slow-pokes.


Comments

One response to “Absentee Voters – Some are consistently quick to vote, others are consistently slow.”

  1. I returned mine in about 3 days in the general, and same day for primary
    There were four races I need to get more information on to make an informed vote. Two of those I ended up leaving blank anyway. If I can’t find the information I’m looking for, it means those candidates didn’t make enough effort to try and earn my vote.
    I refuse to vote the straight ticket option. I think that option should be eliminated. Anyone who is too lazy to go down the ballot and look at the names for every race should not be voting in the first place.

    “He who would trade liberty for some temporary security, deserves neither liberty nor security” – Benjamin Franklin

    by: Republican Michigander @ Sat Nov 15, 2008 at 09:40:04 AM CST

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