Yesterday was primary election day in Anchorage. It was a beautiful sunny day and I biked over to Kasuun Elementary school (and passed the 1200 km mark for the summer so far).
It was basically unremarkable. People came, showed ID, got their ballots, voted in a voting booth, then brought the ballot to the voting machine where it was scanned.
None of the ballots were rejected by the scanner. (In 2022, the first time we had ranked choice voting, the machine did reject some of the ballots. But the screen explained why - usually the person had voted for more than one person with the same ranking.)
After the ballot was scanned, voters got a choice of Alaska themed "I Voted" stickers.
I did notice that the scanner was touchy. Most people had a bit of trouble getting the scanner to suck in their ballot. I'm not sure what the people who got it scanned in right away did differently from the others.
But I did discover, toward the end, that if voters turned the privacy sleeve (with the ballot inside) upside down, then took the blank side of the ballot out of the sleeve and put it into the slot on the scanner, it went in with no problem. (They scan from either end of the ballot, whatever side is up.) Because the ballot choices were so few, the backside of the ballot was blank. So no one's votes were visible. That won't be the case in November.
There were also four first time voters I got to congratulate - three young men and a young woman. Maybe there were more, but I wasn't aware. Okay, some will ask how I was aware, so here's how. The first two were very young looking and I just asked, "You're not a first time voter are you?"and they smiled and said yes. The parents of the other two alerted me.
On the negative side, the turnout was really low. Not sure exactly what the percentage was, but we had over 2000 registered voters on the list and when we finished the scanner said that 294 had voted. If we round it off to 2000 total (and there were more than that) 200 votes would be 10%. 300 votes would be 15%. But then I don't know how many people voted by mail. That's easy to do. At least four people dropped off their mail in ballots, which go in the box with the questioned ballots and don't get scanned.
Actually, I can figure this out more precisely. I looked up the Division of Elections page for House District 12.
My estimate wasn't pretty close. I said 300 would have been 15% if there were 2000 voters. There were 2174 registered voters and the turnout was 13.53%. Not an impressive number. The chart also lists 117 Absentee voters and 438 early voters. But that's for the entire district, not just the one precinct. I would have thought there were more.And of more interest, I assume, to non-Alaskan readers, voters gave Democratic US House of Representatives member Mary Peltola 50.38% of the vote in a 12 way race! The two major Republican vote getters were Alaska Republican Party endorsed candidate Nick Begich with 26.98%, and Trump and major Congressional Republicans supported candidate Nancy Dahlstrom with 20.01%.
Wasn't Begich a Dem earlier or am I thinking of the wrong Begich?
ReplyDeleteMike, I'm sure you aren't the only confused person here. Yes, this is a different Begich. Nick Begich was an Alaska Congressman when he and Louisiana Congressman Hale Boggs disappeared in a plane crash in Alaska in 1972. Two of his sons - Mark and Tom - have been active in Democratic politics. Mark as Anchorage Mayor and US Senator. Tom as a state senator. Nick Begich II is their brother. Nick Begich III (the candidate here) is their nephew. As I understand it, III's parents divorced and he was brought up by his Evangelical grandmother in Florida. Mark and Tom didn't have a much contact with him, though they have connected since he's returned to Alaska.
Deleteps I was a long time commenter on The Mudflats blog and remember hearing about a Begich there.
ReplyDelete