Between March 1 and March 15, 19 non-caucus states will hold their presidential nominating contests. Of those, voting has already started in 11 of them.
We don’t know which candidates have an advantage in early voting. But based on the bits and pieces of information that states and counties have released, we can get an idea about turnout: Which party’s voters are fired up and ready to go, and which haven’t tuned in?
Here’s what we know in several of the key upcoming states:
Texas (Mar 1): In the state’s ten largest counties, 176,184 people voted in the Republican primary during the first six days of early voting. That’s way up compared to the last two presidential election cycles. On the Democratic side, 160,798 people voted during the same period. That’s way down from the 319,747 who voted during this period in 2008, when Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were locked in a fierce battle. One Texas political expert has characterized the overall turnout as decent but not “off the charts.” The state’s native son, Sen. Ted Cruz, is fighting to hold off Donald Trump in the GOP race here.
Tennessee (Mar 1): Early voting has been open since February 10, and turnout appears to be high, especially on the GOP side. In the Republican primary, 257,209 votes have been cast, while 128,374 people have voted in the Democratic primary. In many counties, that number appears to be higher than in 2008 — the last time both parties had open nomination fights.









