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How Exceptional Was Turnout in 2004?
by Scott L. Althaus
Two years ago in this issue of Political Communication Report,
Tom Patterson presented a detailed analysis of the historical
declines in American voter turnout. This article revisits
Patterson’s analysis to ask whether the 2004 presidential
election marked a turning point in this long-term decline.
Judging from the television coverage of long lines at polling
places around the country, November’s election might
seem destined to break historical records for levels of voter
involvement. After all, more people voted for president than
in any previous election. But did these voters constitute
a substantially larger share of the eligible population than
in previous years?
In the analysis below, I suggest that while 2004 turnout levels
were indeed somewhat higher than those in 2000—particularly
in battleground states and in states with gay marriage referenda,
as will be detailed below—they did not appear to break
any records. An important reason that popular accounts were
often so confused about the level of turnout is that there
are now several different ways of measuring turnout, compared
to one generally accepted method that had been used prior
to 2001. To assist political communication researchers in
making sense of recent turnout trends, the main part of this
article therefore examines the new methods of estimating voter
involvement.
Did We Turn Up the
Turnout?
On November 2nd, slightly more than 121 million votes were
cast for president among a national population of 204 million
eligible voters. This 59.6% turnout rate [1]
sounds impressive at first glance to those familiar with past
levels of turnout, but in context it may seem less so. In
2000, the turnout rate among eligible voters was indeed lower—at
54.2%—but neither of these recent contests surpassed
the 60.6% turnout in the three-way 1992 race.
Astute observers of the political process will quickly object
that the turnout rates were 51.2% in 2000 and 55.0% in 1992,
implying that the 2004 election had substantially higher turnout
than any contest since 1968, when unrest at home and war abroad
drove nearly 61% of eligible voters to cast a ballot, a figure
never surpassed since.
Only if we compare apples to oranges.
The main reason that a 59.6% turnout sounds impressive is
that these earlier measures of voter turnout divided the number
of ballots cast by a different denominator: the number of
voting-age persons rather than the number of eligible voters.
Turnout Ain’t What It Used to Be
There is so much confusion today about measuring turnout
that it is worthwhile to take a closer look at the alternative
methods, each of which yields a different apparent level of
turnout.\
Turnout estimates can use any of three denominators:
- The voting-age population (VAP), which includes non-citizens
and felons ineligible to vote, and excludes expatriate citizens
who could legally vote from overseas: VAP estimates provide
the lowest turnout levels because they underestimate actual
turnout.
- The vote-eligible population (VEP), a measure developed
by McDonald and Popkin (2001), which is voting-age population
minus disenfranchised felons minus noncitizens plus eligible
overseas citizens: VEP estimates provide (correctly) higher
measures of turnout than VAP.
- The number of registered voters: REGISTERED estimates
should tend to produce the highest apparent levels of turnout
because they improperly exclude eligible voters not registered.
My home state of Illinois provides substantive illustration
of these different ways of calculating turnout. Illinois cast
a total of 5,271,049 ballots on November 2nd. VAP gives an
underestimated turnout of 55.4%, VEP gives the correct turnout
of 60.3%, and REGISTERED gives an overestimated turnout of
69.9%. Turnout can seem high or low depending on which denominator
is being used, so the important thing is to always compare
apples with apples.
Back in 2000 there was only one accepted denominator for
calculating turnout—voting-age population—because
due to variations in the way states handle registration procedures,
there is no national estimate of the number of registered
voters. But research by political scientists Michael McDonald
and Samuel Popkin published after the 2000 election (McDonald
and Popkin 2001) showed that using the number of voting-age
persons as the turnout denominator shorted actual levels of
voting because many adults are felons ineligible to vote,
and many more are non-citizens. Using voting-age persons therefore
made turnout levels appear lower than they actually were.
To correct this problem, turnout estimates made in the last
three years have begun using vote-eligible population rather
than voting-age persons to calculate turnout levels.
The consensus now in the research community is that VEP
is the correct formulation. But since all of the “old”
turnout numbers are based on VAP, this discrepancy alone gives
a misleading impression that turnout has suddenly risen, when
mainly this apparent rise comes from the new denominator that
is now the norm.
An additional source of confusion is that there are now
two alternate estimates of the vote-eligible population. This
means that in 2004 there were three alternative ways of calculating
voter turnout, which produce three slightly different turnout
trends between 1968 and 2004 (see Table 1).
The first is the “old” measure, which divides
votes cast for president by the voting-age population. VAP
estimates produce what are to most of us the familiar turnout
numbers for past elections, but they are now widely seen as
problematic measures that underestimate actual turnout levels.
The other two trends divide votes cast by measures of vote-eligible
population, which correct for the errors introduced by VAP
alone. The first VEP estimate is the McDonald and Popkin measure.
The second VEP estimate is being used by Curtis Gans for the
Committee for the Study of the American Electorate report,
and was originally developed by Walter Dean Burnham. This
way of estimating the vote-eligible population uses a less
sophisticated formula than that used by McDonald and Popkin:
voting-age population minus non-citizen adults.
These two VEP estimates yield fairly similar results for
the last three elections. But the McDonald and Popkin VEP
measure produces a 1992 turnout of 60.6%, which is still a
full point higher than the 59.6% turnout rate their measure
yields for 2004. In contrast, the Gans and Burnham measure
suggests a 1992 turnout of just 58.1%, which would be more
than two points lower than the 60.3 that their measure yields
for 2004.
Thus, the claim that 2004 was a year of record-breaking
turnout turns entirely on an arcane methodological debate
about the proper way to estimate turnout for 1992. Only the
Gans and Burnham formulation suggests that this election’s
turnout levels were exceptional. Using either of the other
two ways of measuring turnout—VAP or McDonald &
Popkin’s VEP—1992 had the higher levels of voter
participation.
Which measure is the correct one? McDonald and Popkin’s
has been rigorously peer-reviewed, unlike (to my knowledge)
the Gans and Burnham measure. Moreover, the McDonald and Popkin
formulation makes more intuitive sense than Gans and Burnham’s,
which ignores both ineligible felons as well as eligible expatriates.
Gans claims that since the number of ineligible felons tends
to be about the same as the number of eligible expatriates,
both numbers should tend to cancel out and thus can be ignored
(Committee 2004: Part II, pp. 1-4). However, this claim is
only generally true for the 1994-2004 period, and even in
this period it does not always hold. According to the analysis
by McDonald and Popkin (2001, Table 1) in every year from
1948 to 1992 the number of ineligible felons was always substantially
lower than the number of eligible expatriates. This means
that the Gans and Burnham measure, which is based on a flawed
premise, incorrectly underestimates actual levels of vote-eligible
turnout for the period before 1994.
These factors convince me that the McDonald and Popkin formula
provides the superior measure of vote-eligible population.
By that measure, 1992 is still the year to beat.
Buoyed in the Battlegrounds
National turnout didn’t set any records this past
year, but having advanced this claim, it is nonetheless important
to point out that turnout was quite a bit higher than usual
in the battleground states.
If we divide the country into battleground and non-battleground
states, and then calculate aggregate turnout separately for
these two groups [2], we are presented
with an interesting contrast. Among the nine battleground
states—Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire,
New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin—the total
number of votes cast divided by the total population of eligible
voters yields an aggregate turnout rate of 66.3%, up 8.4 percentage
points from their aggregate 2000 turnout of 57.9%. Among the
other 42 states (including the District of Columbia), the
aggregate 2004 turnout was 58.9% of eligible voters, up 4.7
points from the 54.2% turnout rate in 2000 for the combined
vote in those states. Seen in this way, the relative gain
for battleground states was an additional 3.7 percentage points
in turnout over non-battleground states.
Mobilized by Gay Marriage
Turnout was also higher in states that voted on referenda
banning homosexual marriage. But although this issue has been
cited as a major mobilizing factor in the 2004 election, the
numbers suggest a somewhat more limited impact.
Among the 11 states with gay marriage
referenda—Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi,
Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, and Utah—the
total number of votes cast divided by the total population
of eligible voters yields an aggregate turnout rate of 61.9%,
up 7.5 percentage points from their aggregate 2000 turnout
of 54.4%. Among the other 40 states (including the District
of Columbia), the aggregate 2004 turnout was 60.2% of eligible
voters, up 5.1 points from the 55.1% turnout rate in 2000
for the combined vote in those states.[3]
Thus, having gay marriage on the state’s agenda appeared
to boost relative turnout by 2.4 percentage points. This is
a smaller effect than for being targeted as a battleground
state, but—especially in the case of Ohio—important
nonetheless.
Do We Have a Mandate?
While the levels of turnout in 2004 weren’t historically
exceptional, many commentators have suggested that President
Bush might claim a mandate on the basis of receiving more
votes than any other president in American history, and on
the basis of being the first president since his father to
win more than 50% of the popular vote. Although the first
claim is technically correct, it is also true that John Kerry
received more votes than any previous president in American
history. Since the first claim becomes an embarrassingly weak
leg to stand on, attention has shifted to the second.
It is clear by any measure that President Bush had a clean
win in 2004, leading his opponent by 3.2 million votes. But
no one to my knowledge has noticed something peculiar about
this 3.2 million vote advantage: more than half of those votes
come from President Bush’s home state of Texas, where
Bush won with a landslide 1.7 million votes over his opponent
from Massachusetts.
If we remove the home state advantage, we are left with
a Bush lead whittled down to 1.5 million votes, or 1.2% of
ballots cast for president. To put this in context, it is
instructive to recall that President Clinton was widely perceived
to have failed to receive a mandate in 1996 because he won
with slightly less than 50% of the vote. However, Clinton’s
lead in the popular vote was 8.2 million ballots over Bob
Dole, and even if we take away his meager home state advantage
(a 150,000-vote margin in Arkansas), he was left with an 8
million vote lead over his opponent, constituting 9.3% of
the popular vote cast in 1996. If President Clinton couldn’t
claim a mandate out of a lead like that, it is difficult to
imagine how President Bush could claim one with a margin of
victory less than one-seventh the size of President Clinton’s
re-election margin.
Historians may continue to debate the mandate issue—and,
it should be pointed out, nearly every president tries to
claim one—but no one should conclude that President
Bush was re-elected on an unprecedented tide of new enthusiasm
for matters political. To the contrary, we as a people were
only slightly more motivated to vote in 2004 than we were
when Bush was running against Gore. In 2004, as in the previous
election, the larger story is the nearly half of eligible
voters who stayed at home despite an uncertain situation in
Iraq, growing concerns about terrorism on American soil, the
prospect of new faces on the Supreme Court, the pressing need
for Social Security reform, and a host of important choices
that will shape the future of this great country in ways big
and small. For this group of stay-at-homes, it was just another
Tuesday.
References
Committee for the Study of the American Electorate. 2004.
President Bush, Mobilization Drives Propel Turnout to Post-1968
High: Kerry, Democratic Weakness Shown. Washington D. C.:
Committee for the Study of the American Electorate. Available
here.
McDonald, Michael P., and Samuel L. Popkin. 2001. The myth
of the vanishing voter. American Political Science Review
95 (4):963-74.
Scott L. Althaus is Associate Professor of Speech Communication
and Political Science at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
- Unless otherwise noted, all of
the turnout measures in this article are calculated by dividing
the number of votes cast for president by the number of
eligible voters. Votes cast for president were obtained
by locating the official, certified presidential vote for
each state from the web sites maintained by secretaries
of state. Official vote totals were collected from the Internet
on December 8, 2004. The estimates of vote-eligible population
used throughout this article were developed by Michael McDonald
and Samuel Popkin (2001). National estimates of vote-eligible
population for the 1968–2000 period come from Table
1 of their APSR article, while state-level estimates and
the national estimate for 2004 come from the U.S.
Elections Project web page maintained by Michael McDonald
at George Mason University. The author thanks McDonald and
the U.S. Elections Project for making these data available
to the scholarly community. [return]
- In other words, this way of comparing
turnout lumps all votes cast in all the battleground states
together and divides by the total number of eligible voters
in all of those states combined. I refer to this measure
as aggregate turnout to differentiate from an alternative
method: comparing the average level of turnout in battleground
states with the average level of turnout in non-battleground
states. Using this approach, the average vote-eligible turnout
in battleground states was 66.5%, while the average turnout
in non-battleground states was 60.4%. But note that both
of these averages are higher than the national turnout rate
of 59.6%. The reason for this discrepancy is that average
turnout over-represents small states relative to the size
of their populations, and small states tend to have higher
levels of turnout. It thus gives a misleadingly high estimate
of overall turnout, and for that reason I report the population-sensitive
measure of aggregate turnout instead. [return]
- As detailed in note 2, these estimates
are also using aggregate turnout. The comparable 2004 figure
for average turnout in states with gay marriage referenda
was 60.9% of eligible voters, compared to an average of
61.5% for the states without such referenda. This is opposite
the pattern in aggregate turnout: using average turnout,
voter involvement appears lower in states with gay marriage
referenda. As discussed above, these average levels present
a misleading picture because they fail to account for between-state
differences in population. Most of the states with gay marriage
initiatives were small states that did little to influence
aggregate vote totals. [return]
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