From Deseret News archives:
Voter turnout is down
Utah's decline bucks U.S. trend, is biggest drop among all states
Just 53.8 percent of Utah's eligible voting-age population voted last month down from an also-low 58.9 percent four years ago.
That drop of 5.1 percentage points was the worst among all states, according to data compiled by the United States Election Project at George Mason University.
"That's real disappointing but somewhat understandable for the simple fact that Utah didn't have any competitive races," said Kirk Jowers, director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah.
"The presidential race was not competitive here, although (Barack) Obama did relatively well. Gov. (Jon) Huntsman won by a record margin. Utah's members of Congress and the attorney general all won by large margins. So you didn't have the excitement of a close race," Jowers said.
Kelly Patterson, a Brigham Young University political science professor, adds that because races are not competitive here, parties don't spend a lot on get-out-the-vote efforts, "and voter mobilization efforts are important to voter turnout."
Jowers added that the states with the biggest increases in voter turnout were those that suddenly found themselves as new swing states in the presidential race "where they felt their votes mattered" and where parties and candidates worked hard to turn out the vote.
Such states included North Carolina where voter turnout increased by 8 points, from 57.8 percent to 65.8 percent and Virginia, where turnout was up by 7 points, from 60.6 percent to 67.6 percent.
Nationally, 61.6 percent of America's voting-age population voted this year the highest since 1968.
The states with the highest turnout were Minnesota, 77.8 percent; Wisconsin, 72.5 percent; Maine, 71.1 percent; and New Hampshire, 71 percent.
Utah had the fourth-lowest rate among the states. The only states where it was lower were West Virginia and Hawaii, both at 50.6 percent, and Arkansas, 53.4 percent.
Jowers said that contributing to low turnout in Utah likely was "a lack of passion for Utah Republicans to vote for (GOP presidential nominee John) McCain or against Obama. In 2004 and 2000, there was a real dislike among them for the Democratic nominees. This time, people did not hate Obama," he said.
Jowers said Utah likely would have done much better if Mitt Romney a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and former head of the 2002 Olympics had been on the ballot.














