Friday, March 11, 2016

Breaking Down Pennsylvania's Voter Registration Data

A number of news stories have focused on the fact that "46,000" (it's actually more than 49,000, as of March 7) Pennsylvania Democrats switched their voter registration to Republican, and speculated that's a "Trump effect."

Now 49,000 switches is a huge number, larger than past years, and that may be the “Trump effect”—though if it is, that runs against the narrative of “racist Republicans” supporting Trump, when it's Democrats who like Trump’s big government, xenophobic policies.

But it may also be the “Wolf effect,” or the “Obama effect,” or simply presidential election enthusiasm. It could also be folks switching to oppose Trump.

Most likely (this is my hypothesis), it’s the fact this will likely be the first time in decades Pennsylvania’s primary will help determine the GOP nominee.

But the fact is this number doesn't represent some mass movement or a resurgence of the Republican party in Pennsylvania.

1) Conversions from Republican to Democrat are also up. More than 25,000 Republicans and almost 32,000 "other" switch their registration to Democrat.

The 25,000 Republicans who switched in the first 3 months are also  higher than the total in 2013, 2014, or 2015. Moreover, Republicans usually have an advantage in party shifts, though Democrats have outpaced Republicans in getting independent voters to switch their party registration.

Party to Party Changes

R to D
Other to D
D to R
Other to R
Net R Gain
2008 to 2012
78,224
55,216
125,215
47,054
38,829
2013
16,921
7,028
12,454
8,632
-2,863
2014
16,559
11,655
19,903
8,225
-86
2015
17,864
18,797
29,792
15,884
9,015
2016
25,390
31,678
49,856
24,972
17,760
Total
154,958
124,374
237,220
104,767
62,655


2) This doesn’t approach the wave of 2008. In the year before the 2008 primary (with the Obama wave and the close Obama-Clinton primary race), Democrats gained 328,000 registered voters, while Republicans lost 73,000—a net swing of 401,000. 

Over the past 10 months, Republicans have gained ground on Democrats, but only by 34,000 on Democrats.

Total Registered Voters in Pennsylvania

Dems
GOP
Dem Advantage
May 2007
3,872,018
3,259,243
612,775
2008 Primary
4,200,109
3,186,057
1,014,052
Change
328,091
-73,186
401,277

May 2015
3,963,864
2,964,437
999,427
March 2016
3,996,333
3,031,114
965,219
Change
32,469
66,677
-34,208


3) Democrats continue to lead in new party registration. Democrats have had 6,000 more newly registered voters than Republicans, an have out-gained Republicans in new registration every year. While the first three months of 2016 are an exception, new voter registrations matters more than party-to-party shifts. Since 2008, Republicans are a +63,000 in party shifts, but Democrats are a +219,000 in new voter registration.

New Voter Registration

D
R
Other
Net D-R
2008-09
84,527
53,786
47,018
30,741
2010
77,165
59,852
50,108
17,313
2011
77,562
60,605
45,858
16,957
2012
211,025
123,478
118,408
87,547
2013
69,808
46,842
47,951
22,966
2014
75,349
56,411
56,604
18,938
2015
89,310
70,487
53,082
18,823
2016
34,967
28,908
15,090
6,059
Total
719,713
500,369
434,119
219,344

1 comment:

Bernard "Mike" Fowler said...

An excellent, informative article. Thank you.