The Texas Secretary of State鈥檚 office reported Wednesday 2.3% of registered voters in the state have so far cast a ballot ahead of the Nov. 2 elections. Turnout is down compared to the Nov. 5, 2019 elections, which stood at 2.9% in the first nine days of early voting.
St. Edward's University Political Science Professor Brian Smith says voter participation is historically lowest in such elections, which typically do not include any presidential or statewide candidates. 鈥淐onstitutional elections are not very exciting. They鈥檙e very important, but not very exciting. They don鈥檛 have the celebrity candidates. There鈥檚 nobody on the ballot to really get us out to vote.鈥
Among the state鈥檚 most-populous counties, voting numbers this year are down slightly in Harris (2.9%), Bexar (2.4%) and Collin (2.1%) counties, but significantly higher in Travis County, where voter turnout hit 5.7% on Wednesday as opposed to 3.2% at the same point in 2019.
Smith says higher turnout in the state capital is due to a local ballot measure, Proposition A, which would require Austin to hire hundreds more police officers. The is a response to the Austin City Council cutting funding for law enforcement last year amid widespread protests against police brutality.
鈥淲e鈥檙e actually seeing media spots on TV over that,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淪o that鈥檚 why Travis County, especially with early voting, is a little bit higher than the rest of the state because there is something to bring voters out to the polls.鈥
The statewide ballot includes eight amendments to the Texas Constitution. Those include proposals stemming from public health restrictions imposed last year to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Proposition 3 would ban state and local governments from 鈥減rohibiting or limiting religious services of religious organizations.鈥 Proposition 6 would give residents in long-term care facilities the right to designate an essential caregiver for in-person visitations. .
The last day to vote early in person early is Friday.