Mecklenburg County's early voting numbers don't show "2008 feeling"
Add Axios as your preferred source to
see more of our stories on Google.

The blue-dominant Charlotte area may be on its way to letting the Democratic Party down again by not turning out enough voters.
Why it matters: Mecklenburg County is one of the most important counties in the U.S. presidential election.
- Local party leaders say Mecklenburg has the Democratic population to push Vice President Harris toward a North Carolina victory — the same way Fulton County does in Georgia.
- But if turnout continues to lag here, it'll be much easier for former President Trump to win North Carolina again. In an election this close, that could mean winning the presidency.
By the numbers: Despite the region's population growth, voter turnout so far is well below 2020 numbers.
- During the 2020 presidential election, about 1.4 million Democrats statewide had voted by this point. More than 185,000 of those people were from Mecklenburg, State Board of Elections data shows.
- This year, fewer than 145,000 Democrats have cast ballots in Mecklenburg.
- Meanwhile, statewide Republican turnout has surpassed 1.14 million, exceeding 2020. Around this time in 2020, it was 1.13 million.
Yes, but: Andrew Richards, deputy director of MeckDems, says the pandemic year was so unusual that it's almost not worth comparison.
- Only 16% of North Carolina voters cast ballots on Election Day that year.
- In other recent elections, around 30–45% of voting happened on Election Day.
Between the lines: In-person early voting turnout in Mecklenburg by Democrats increased by 2.5% from 2020, but Democrats represent a smaller share of all voters who have cast ballots early this year than they did in 2020.
- In the first 13 days of early voting in 2020, Democrats made up 46% of all in-person early voters. This year, that number is 43%.
Driving the news: Still, the lackluster numbers seem even more surprising given the recent efforts of the Mecklenburg County Democratic Party. Over the last few years, it's transformed from a volunteer group to an organization with over 20 staffers.
- It's on pace to knock on over 300,000 doors this election cycle. Its fundraising exceeded $2 million, compared to $152,000 in 2020.
Flashback: Turnout in Mecklenburg County has historically been low. Charlotte's been blamed for Democratic losses in high-profile contests, such as Cheri Beasley in the 2022 U.S. Senate race and her 2021 race for North Carolina Supreme Court chief justice, which she lost by about 400 votes.
- As recently as the March primaries, Mecklenburg County's turnout was under 19%. It was 24% statewide.
- Trump won North Carolina by just over 74,000 votes in 2020. Turnout was also lower that year in Mecklenburg than in the rest of the state, by nearly four percentage points.
- Mecklenburg is "a necessary, but not sufficient condition to Democrats winning in North Carolina," Richards says.
What they're saying: During a campaign event on Monday, when asked whether the Democrats' turnout was concerning, Gov. Roy Cooper told Axios he still has that "2008 feeling," referring to the last time North Carolina elected a Democrat for president.
- In 2008, 55.5% of voters cast their ballots early. Nearly 560,000 more registered Democrats had voted than Republicans by Election Day eve.
- Cooper chalks the Republicans' statewide lead in early voting turnout this year up to former President Trump encouraging his supporters to vote early.
- "There's still this entire week to go, and I sense the excitement," Cooper said.
The other side: The Democratic turnout challenges the narrative that Harris resurrected enthusiasm within the party.
- "If you had this sort of groundswell of enthusiasm, it would have come out in those first several days of early voting, like it did for Republicans," Matt Mercer of the North Carolina GOP tells Axios.
- Mercer says his party isn't taking its early lead for granted. Through Election Day, the GOP continues to target urban areas like Charlotte, with large voting populations and many undecided voters.
Another stark warning for the Harris campaign: Black voter turnout in North Carolina is down, Axios Raleigh reports.
- Those ballots could swing battleground states like Georgia and North Carolina, which have higher percentages of Black voters than the rest of the country — but not if they don't vote.
