Voter turnout sharply down from 2007 primary
Far fewer Baltimore voters have cast ballots in the city primary this morning compared to the 2007 election, according to the director of the Baltimore Board of Elections.
By 11 a.m., 15,283 people had cast ballots, which is about 4,100 fewer voters than the last city primary, said Armstead B. Crowley Jones Sr, elections director.
That means that about 4 percent of the city's 380,000 registered voters had voted.
Jones predicted that about 20 percent of registered voters would come to the polls.
In the six days of early voting -- which marked the first time that Baltimoreans have been able to cast ballots in a city race before the primary -- 7,815 residents voted.
"I'm looking at 18-20 [percent], somewhere around there," Crowley said. "By the time everything is added up, we may get to 25."
Jones reported no significant problems at the polls this morning, but said that two of the city's 290 polling places opened about 20 minutes late due to tardy judges.
Polls will remain open until 8 p.m
Politics turned Parody from within a Conservative Bastion inside the People's Republic of Maryland
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Signs of Democratic Voter Despair?
from the Baltimore Sun
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