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Turnout is third-lowest in Alaska state primary history

Voters cast ballots in Tuesday’s primary election at Glacier Valley Baptist Church in Juneau. (Andrew Kitchenman/KTOO)
Voters cast ballots in Tuesday’s primary election at Glacier Valley Baptist Church in Juneau. (Andrew Kitchenman/KTOO)

Turnout for Tuesday’s state primary was the third-lowest in Alaska’s history.

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Of registered voters, 18.2 percent cast ballots, with five precincts and some absentee ballots left to count.

Republican pollster and strategist Marc Hellenthal said that wasn’t surprising.

“The motivator to get people to vote was really on the Republican side, with the Republican gubernatorial primary,” Hellenthal said. “Neither Mead Treadwell or Mike Dunleavy spent a lot on mass media.”

That means that many voters weren’t aware there even was a primary.

And Hellenthal pointed out a second reason for low turnout: Anchorage’s recent municipal election where voters sent their ballots by mail. He said some voters expected every election to be like that from now on.

“People were wondering why they hadn’t got their ballots yet,” Hellenthal said. “They didn’t make the distinction between municipal and state.”

Hellenthal has worked with Republican nominee Mike Dunleavy.

The second-lowest turnout was two years ago, when 17.22 percent of those registered voted. And the all-time low was in 2000, when 17.18 percent voted.

Andrew Kitchenman is the editor-in-chief of the Alaska Beacon. He has covered state government in Alaska since 2016, previously serving as the Capitol reporter for Alaska Public Media and KTOO. Contact Andrew at info@alaskabeacon.com.