| Waiting until the
last minute may be a good thing - especially if you are
running for office in 2008. According to a University of
Buffalo study of the 2000 Presidential election and voter
registration, voters who registered closer to the election
were more likely to actually turn out to vote.
Take-away from this: If you have only
so much in your resource bank, spend it closer to the election
getting people to register. They may be the ones making
the difference in what is promising to be a close election on
every level of the political process.
Read the complete story below from the
University
of Buffalo
Late registrants more likely
to vote, finds study of voter participation
Voter registration spikes after major political events, but
motor voter laws don't drive turnout, study also shows
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- "Later is better"
when it comes to voter registration in national elections,
according a new study of voter participation in the 2000
presidential election.
People who register to vote closer to
registration deadlines are much more likely to vote on
Election Day than are people who register earlier in an
election year, according to the study conducted by political
scientists from the University at Buffalo, University of
Maryland and University of Texas.
"It's a very interesting pattern,"
says UB researcher Joshua J. Dyck, Ph.D., assistant professor
of political science. "For political campaigns focused on
get-out-the-vote efforts, the takeaway message is this: you'll
get more bang for your buck if you focus on the narrow window
close to the registration deadline.
"That's where we see a huge surge in
voter registration and those people are much more likely to
turn out to vote."
Dyck's co-researchers were James G.
Gimpel, Ph.D., professor of government at University of
Maryland, and Daron R. Shaw, Ph.D., associate professor of
government at University of Texas.
The researchers focused on voter
registration and voter turnout in large counties in six states
during the 2000 presidential campaign. These included
battleground states Florida, Iowa and New Mexico, as well as
Kentucky, Nevada and North Carolina. The sample included more
than 400,000 registered voters.
The deadline for voter registration is
about 30 days before an election in most states.
To be published in a forthcoming issue
of Party Politics, the study is one of the first to assess to
the effect of timing and campaign activity on voter
registration, explains Dyck, an expert on political
participation. Campaigns historically have focused on turning
out registered voters, but with the closeness of recent
national elections the major parties are focusing more on
voter registration, he notes.
"Political parties are much more
effective at turning out people who they know are going to be
reliable supporters than they are at generating new voters,"
Dyck explains. "These results show that they should consider
adding late-registration drives to their outreach, and that
timing is important."
The study found that people who
registered to vote the week of the registration deadline were
16 percent more likely to vote than those who registered one
year from the deadline. Of the late registrants, young adults
were 15 percent less likely to vote than older adults, and
women were more likely than men to turn out. Across all
counties studied, an average of 125 percent more registrants
signed up in the three weeks prior to the deadline than in all
previous weeks.
Also, Republican late registrants were
much more likely to vote than late-registering Democrats. The
study showed that in most places where Democrats "won" the
election in 2000, they had to register many more people than
the Republicans because the GOP's new registrants appeared to
vote at almost twice the rate as new Democratic registrants.
Late registrants from both parties were more likely to vote
than independents.
As a group, late registrants were
generally young adults between the ages of 18-49; the majority
were under 40. Most late registrants were independents,
particularly among younger adults.
The study also found that spikes in
voter registration coincided with the occurrence of
conventions, primaries and other major political events during
an election year. "This would appear to be good news for
campaign organizers, but it is unclear if the spike in
registrations after major political events is result of
extensive party outreach that accompany these events or a
spontaneous reaction," Dyck says.
Another spike in registration occurred
after Independence Day, when campaigns targeted communities
that grant citizenship to immigrants on that date, the study
shows.
On the flipside, the study also
suggests much more muted electoral effects from motor voter
laws. While people are registering with greater frequency when
they make their regular trip to the DMV, the electoral gains
realized from this registration increase is nowhere near to
what you get over the course of a campaign.
"Reforms, such as motor voter laws,
aimed solely at increasing registration rates, will not
necessarily lead to higher voter turnout," Dyck says.
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