In recent years, Republicans across the country have tried to reduce early voting opportunities, and especially Sunday voting. Ohio and North Carolina got rid of all but one day of Sunday voting this year (Ohio tried to scrap them all, but was stopped by a court).
Some new data from this year’s midterms helps explain why the GOP might want to eliminate voting on Sundays.
In Georgia and North Carolina, blacks accounted for an already impressive 27% of all early votes cast so far, according to numbers analyzed by The New York Times. But looking at Sunday alone, that figure nearly doubles to a whopping 53%.
Related: Fight over North Carolina voting law puts Tillis in awkward spot
One likely reason for the Sunday surge is the “Souls to the Polls” drives, in which black churches organize buses to take congregants to vote en masse after services.









