Officials: Early voting turnout passes 2M
NEW YORK (AP) -- At least 2.2 million people have cast in-person ballots in New York ahead of Election Day, officials announced Sunday, the state's ninth and final day of early voting. New Yorkers reported wait times of a half-hour or less at many polling places and posted selfies of early voting stickers to social media. The New York City Board of Elections shared a photograph of a 100-year-old voter casting a ballot and wearing a mask. On top of the early voting numbers, more than a million voters have already returned absentee ballots, elections officials said, bringing the total number of votes cast prior to Sunday's tally at nearly 3.3 million. That's nearly 42 percent of the total vote in the 2016 presidential election. Absentee ballots must be postmarked by Nov. 3 to be counted. This was the first time New York has allowed early voting in a presidential election. Early voting ended Sunday afternoon and New York didn't offer the option on Monday. People could vote in person at the polls on Election Day. Jarret Berg, an attorney and a co-founder of the nonprofit Vote Early New York, said early voting proved "indispensable." The state was fortunate it "came when it did," he added, "as it had been proposed for over a decade but enacted only in 2019 with overwhelming pressure from advocates and the public to modernize New York's antiquated elections." "What's clear is that early voting is here to stay and that process of modernization has only just begun," Berg said. New York lawmakers this year allowed voters to request absentee ballots for the general election out of concern over in-person voting during the coronavirus pandemic. The state typically had allowed voters to request absentee ballots only if they fall into one of several categories, including absence from one's county on Election Day. There are 280 early polling sites statewide. In 35 counties, there is only one early voting site. The rush to vote is leading election experts to predict a record 150 million votes cast nationwide, with turnout rates higher than in any presidential election since 1908. New York's overall turnout was projected to top two-thirds of 12 million registered voters. The state did not allow early voting in 2016.
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