Massachusetts election: Brown, Coakley try to get out the vote
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| Boston
After over four months of campaigning, the Senate candidates in the Massachusetts election now await the outcome of the vote Tuesday.
The only thing left for them to do: get voters to the polls.
Special elections typically have low voter turnout, but this time, polling places are likely to be busier because of all the national attention and the closeness of the race. Anywhere from 1.6 million to 2.2 million of the state鈥檚 4.1 million registered voters are expected to cast ballots, according to estimates released by William Galvin, Massachusetts鈥 Secretary of State.
Turnout of the state鈥檚 2.4 million independent voters is expected to be crucial to the race鈥檚 outcome. While Democrats outnumber Republicans 3 to 1 in the Bay State, independents are the majority 鈥 51 percent 鈥 of voters. Polling suggests that independents favor Scott Brown, the Republican candidate, but they are historically less likely to vote than those affiliated with a political party.
Martha Coakley, the Democratic candidate, arguably has a more extensive get-out-the-vote-operation than Mr. Brown does. For Tuesday, she has some 50 phone banks scheduled, in which people call voters and urge them to get to the polls. And she has more than 6,000 volunteers working on her campaign, .
Coakley also has unions, including the AFL-CIO and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), mobilizing volunteers on her behalf. According to an , this past weekend 鈥渢housands of union members [were] working at phone banks in local union halls, knocking on doors of other union members and talking with their co-workers at jobs sites across the Bay State.鈥
SEIU put 300 volunteers into the field and spent $685,000 on a TV ad attacking Brown, .
Brown, meanwhile, is focusing on grass-roots efforts. His campaign puts the number of volunteers in the hundreds, with people out knocking on doors or making calls from one of the campaign's 10 regional offices.
In addition, Brown has launched a 鈥渧oter bomb,鈥 where supporters can pledge to call up to 20 of their friends and rally them to vote for Brown. More than 31,000 phone-call commitments were made as of Tuesday morning, the campaign reports.
Brown has also sent e-mails to supporters offering rides to their polling stations. And 600 volunteers are using technology that allows them to download addresses and contact information to their smart phones for canvassing efforts, .
In the final days of the race, the Globe also says, Brown augmented his network by hiring a company to provide up to 70 workers per day to knock on doors.
Moreover, Brown鈥檚 campaign has created a hot line for voters to report any irregularities at the polls 鈥 鈥渋ncluding voter intimidation, errors and fraud,鈥 according to a campaign press release. On her campaign website, Coakley asks supporters to e-mail her if they 鈥渆xperience aggressive or bullying tactics by Scott Brown's campaign鈥 鈥 perhaps an indication of the combative tone the race has taken at it nears the finish line.
Each candidate has already voted in his or her hometown and plans to spend the rest of Tuesday crisscrossing the state to ensure their supporters head to the polls as well.
In recent surveys, Coakley is trailing Brown. Over the weekend, Suffolk University conducted polls in three communities that had returned results nearly identical to the final state鈥檚 final tallies in the 2006 Senate race. This time, the polling revealed a strong voter preference for Brown.
At stake in Tuesday鈥檚 election is Democrats鈥 supermajority in the Senate. If Coakley is elected, Democrats would have 60 votes to pass bills without any support from Republicans. If Brown wins on Tuesday, Republicans would have 41 votes, meaning they could sustain filibusters on proposed legislation.
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