• FuglyDuck
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      2221 days ago

      that… 19% of “other” is going to be doing a lot of work here. if we assume they’re 50/50, then I take this as, overall, good news.

        • @[email protected]
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          20 days ago

          Wisconsin doesn’t have party registrations as part of voter registration (we used to, back when I first registered, which is likely why there’s some partisan representation, but not for a long time), nor do you need to be registered with a party to vote in the primaries (everything is on one ballot, you can just only vote for one party).

          So that huge chunk of “independent” is probably “new” registrations from the last 15 or so years. They just don’t have data because it stopped being a tracked metric.

        • FuglyDuck
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          520 days ago

          “other” is the catch all for anyone whose not registered as democrat or republican. It includes independents, yes, but it also includes all the 3rd parties and the people who simply didn’t register one way or other (who might be repub or dem, anyhow).

          • @Takumidesh
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            720 days ago

            Yes, I am registered as unaffiliated, because I don’t see why the political party I support needs to be publicly accessible.

            • @LifeInMultipleChoice
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              119 days ago

              Depends on the state, when I lived in Florida you had to be registered to a party to vote in their primaries. It varies all over. Some states you get a ballot with all of the names for the people in your party for primaries, some you can choose any member of any party, it shows that the states aren’t really as similar as we think they are, as the laws for most everything vary. Punch someone in one state, it’s a battery charge, in another it’s assault; which you may be able to get for yelling/threatening to hit someone. Get caught with an illegal substance, well the substance list changes by state, the volumes required for charges change, and the consequences vary. What counts as rape, what age you can marry… It goes on and on. Taxes change by city, county, and state.

      • @Warl0k3
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        921 days ago

        And people who’ve registered with a party are more likely to be proactive voters. Honestly there’s so many complaicating factors here that trying to interpret this data is folly.

        • FuglyDuck
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          421 days ago

          Oh yeah. I don’t for a second believe it’s going to fall out to 50/50 on a perfect split.

          Anyone telling you anything except that it’s too close to call, is selling you something.

          But let me huff my copium, okay?

    • @[email protected]
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      21 days ago

      wtf? are these data random generated? they don’t make sense.

      there is 40% of republicans in 62 millions casted votes (so roughly 25 million) and suddenly 30% in the 63 million (roughly 19 million?) requested ballots?

      either i am missing something, or these data are so imprecise that trying to analyse them is a fools errand.

      • @MirthfulAlembic
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        420 days ago

        About half the states allow same-day voter registration, so there may be people who voted but did not specifically request mail in/early voting, and those who did request but have not cast their vote yet. So, for many states you could be in one set but not the other.

        • @[email protected]
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          120 days ago

          ok, thank you. still - the fact there is such variance in the results means you shouldn’t really try to draw any conclusions from it.

          • @MirthfulAlembic
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            220 days ago

            Agreed. It’s basically the political version of reading tea leaves.