I posted a couple of days ago about unusually heavy voting in Washington State (which has all mail-in/drop-box voting and does not provide information on party affiliation of votes cast). The trend I noted the last time I posted is still holding.
In 2016 (3 days before the election): 43.9% of ballots had been returned.
In 2020 (3 days before the election): 67.6% of ballots have been returned.
I don't know what this means, but I suspect that it may be pretty good for our side. A number of us in Washington have noted that this election feels really different. There is very little visible public support for the main Dem candidates (Joe and Governor Jay) in terms of yard signs, rallies, and such where I am in Western Washington, unlike previous elections. In other parts of the state people are reporting very visible and loud support for PDJT and for R-Governor candidate Culp.
There is most definitely anger here directed at the governor about covid policies: so many shops and restaurants out of business, so many people put out of work, and so many kids kept from regular schools and regular activities. There is also most definitely anger at the failure of government officials to deal with the violence, looting, and destruction of Antifa/BLM and the failure of these officials to support law enforcement.
If this heavy voting is among Ds, then it is because of strong TDS (or maybe because some of them are secretly voting for the good guys???) and not because of strong support for Joe or Jay. If this is heavy voting among Rs, then....whoa....
I'd love to hear what those of you on the ground in Washington see, hear, and think.
Do they provide data on the counties/precincts where the ballots are coming from?
They do, but they make this data difficult to access.
Go to sos.wa.gov. Click on 'Data and Research' at top. Click on 'Election data and statistics' on the left. Click on '2020 General Election - Ballot Return Statistics' near the top. Click on '2020 General Election Ballot Returns by County.'
I used the button underneath this one, '2020 General Comparison to 2016 General.
Lots of info on this site, but it most definitely is not easy to find.