A new morning means a new email from the campaigns. Usually, it means several new emails of increasing neediness – fundraising deadlines have been approaching recently. But today’s are different. Today, the campaign enters a new phase today. Today’s emails are Get-Out-The-Vote emails.
At eight this morning across a grey and rainy Ohio, polling stations opened to allow early voting. Hicksville’s nearest is in the county seat of Defiance, and the polling station is in the local electoral services office. Six or seven people queue good-naturedly in the warm.
Semi-retired warehouse worker Todd Walker describes himself as an independent. “I looked at both candidates, and I made my decision. I voted for the President. I wish there was a better candidate from the Republican party, but there isn’t.”
It is not just the Presidential election that excites people here. Ohio Restricting Amendment, Issue 2 has been proposed by the state’s Democrat party; it is an ordinance which prevents gerrymandering. It is foremost in people’s minds outside the Defiance polling booth. “Issue 2 is the most important to us,” says Susan Brogan, who has come with her wheelchair-bound mother Sherry to beat the queues. Todd Walker agrees: “I don’t want gerrymandering.”
Jim Jurcevitch, at the board of elections, is helping to operate the station. He is not expecting a rush today. “Educated guess? There’ll be about 200, because of the weather.”
Early voting is a crucial factor. In Defiance county in the 2008 Presidential election there were 4,800 early ballots cast – both in-person and absentee. McCain’s majority in the county was only a little over over 2,000 – and the ratio is the same all over the state, where more than quarter of a million early votes were cast. Early voting could carry Ohio – that’s why there’s been so much foul play around early voting here. The campaigns are trying to capitalise on this huge electoral resource.
Charlie Grey is the chair of the local Democratic party. I ask if he’s expecting trouble, and he answers quickly: “Yes. But it won’t be widespread.” He squares his shoulders like a man about to go to war. “We’re watching for it.”
There’s no sign of trouble at the Defiance polling station. Sherry Brogan doesn’t feel like an electoral resource; she’s just enjoying flexing her democratic muscles. “It feels great,” she tells me as she and her daughter head for the exit. “I could do it all over again.”