Sunday, April 28, 2024 Apr 28, 2024
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Politics

High Turnout Has Marked Day One of Early Voting in Dallas County

Lines are good!
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Pamela Nelson lived downtown for 23 years before moving away a year ago, but on Monday, the Dallas artist decided to come back to her old polling place. She was happy to have to wait a little longer than normal, as voters worked through a cramped room at the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library in downtown Dallas. “It’s never been this crowded,” she said, after she’d earned her sticker. “There’s never been this much participation.”

That was the consensus on day one of early voting, where 42,241 people had voted as of 4:30 p.m. on Monday, according to Dallas County Elections Administrator Toni Pippins-Poole. Tarrant County turnout has been similarly strong, with about 38,000 votes cast by then. In 2014, the last mid-term election two years out of a presidential contest, a total of 13,036 people in Dallas County cast votes on day one in person. During the 2016 presidential election, 58,775 voters came out on day one of early voting.

At the library, Soundra McDuff, who is in charge of the location, said people had been lined up outside the door when she opened up at 7 a.m. About 300 people had voted by about noon. One of them was 30-year-old Owen Wilson-Chavez, who said he’d come out in an effort to spur “some sense of reasonableness within our elected officials.”

“I think everyone is trying to make sure their voices are heard,” Tosha Pendleton said, standing in line at the George Allen Courts Building downtown. Pendleton was early voting over her lunch break, as usual, and walked into a much larger turnout than she’d seen in years past.

By about 12:30 p.m., a group of about 45 people had formed a big U of a line in George Allen’s lobby. More than 150 people had come through by 9 a.m., and by 11:30 a.m., the number was up to 443. The folks at the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center said they’d ticked over 400 voters by a little after 1:30 p.m. (although the site’s official update for 1:30 p.m. stood at 308), which made it another site experiencing higher-than-normal volumes.

The report from outside George Allen was that it was taking about 30 minutes to get through. On Dallas County’s helpful site that estimates wait times at polling locations, the majority of the locations were green—meaning a wait time less than 20 minutes—at around 3 p.m. But there were a few, even at that non-peak time, in the red—meaning those locations were experiencing 40-minute waits or greater. The Samuell Grand Recreation Center, University Park Methodist Church, and Fretz Park Library were among them. You can check the wait times for yourself here. Tarrant County has a live voter turnout tool.

DFW isn’t alone. The Houston Chronicle reported that nearly 2,000 people were in line at one location, where Senate candidate Beto O’Rourke later appeared. Social media posts referenced large lines in San Antonio and Austin, as well.

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