Record-breaking numbers show how Americans choose to vote before Election Day
Early-voting stats show unexpected shifts in American voting habits this election season. Numbers in key states like Georgia and Arizona hint at major changes in how people cast their ballots
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Americans are changing how they vote in this years election season with record-setting early-voting numbers (showing a big shift in voting patterns)
The pre-election turnout reached 69 million votes which is about forty-four percent of what we saw in the 2020 election season; this shows a major change in how people pick voting times
Georgia leads the way with an amazing 4 million early-voters — thats roughly 80% compared to last election cycle. The battle-ground states are showing strong numbers too:
- Arizona got half its voters done early
- North Carolina matches Arizonaʼs numbers
- Delaware broke its all-time pre-election record
The way people vote is different now — many dont wait for election day anymore but choose early-voting options instead. Local voting centers report steady flows of people coming in to cast their ballots (which helps avoid last-minute rushes)