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Public Opinion Quarterly 2006 70(2):224-234; doi:10.1093/poq/nfj017
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Association for Public Opinion Research. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Do Absentee Voters Differ from Polling Place Voters?

New Evidence from California

Matt A. Barreto

University of Washington

Matthew J. Streb

Northern Illinois University

Mara Marks and Fernando Guerra

Loyola Marymount University

Address correspondence to Matt Barreto; e-mail: mbarreto{at}washington.edu.

In the 2003 California gubernatorial recall election 2,775,785 absentee ballots were cast, representing about 30 percent of all voters statewide. Given the number of absentee ballots and the increasing propensity for voters in California and elsewhere to choose this voting method, we some basic questions: Who are absentee voters, and are they different from polling place voters? To answer these questions, we fielded a statewide survey of absentee voters in the days before the October 7 recall election, asking respondents why they voted absentee, their partisan and ideological preferences, demographic characteristics, and other relevant questions. We find that absentee voters do not differ significantly from the overall state electorate in terms of their vote preferences, despite being older and better educated. For example, 56 percent of absentee voters in our survey voted "yes" on the recall, compared with 55 percent for the entire state, according to official returns. Further, absentee voters favored Arnold Schwarzenegger over Cruz Bustamante by a considerable margin, similar to the overall election results. We found party registration among absentee voters to be nearly identical to statewide partisan registration.


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T. Kousser and M. Mullin
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