Ballot bypass? Illinois sees lowest presidential primary voter turnout in decades

The statewide voter turnout of 19.07% is the lowest for a presidential primary election since at least 1960, according to Illinois State Board of Elections figures.

SHARE Ballot bypass? Illinois sees lowest presidential primary voter turnout in decades
A voter, wearing a brown puffer coat, feeds her ballot into a voting machine on Election Day at Isabelle C. O’Keeffe School in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood, April 4.

A voter at Isabelle C. O’Keeffe School in South Shore feeds her ballot into a voting machine on Election Day in April.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Complete coverage of the local and national primary and general election, including results, analysis and voter resources to keep Chicago voters informed.

The March 19 election will go down in Illinois history as having the lowest voter turnout for a presidential primary since at least 1960.

Chicago may have avoided surpassing 2012’s bleak low-turnout record of 24.6%, eking out a final turnout of 25.8%. But statewide, just 1,518,856 of the 7,965,287 registered voters in Illinois cast ballots in the March 19 primary. That resulted in a statewide voter turnout of 19.07%, the Illinois State Board of Elections said Friday in releasing its certified election results.

Excuses abound for why the numbers are so low, including that President Joe Biden and Donald Trump already had secured the votes needed to earn their party nominations. But the numbers are the lowest for a presidential primary election since at least 1960, according to state election board figures.

The only office on the ballot statewide was president. Biden won the Democratic primary with 91.48%, of the ballots cast, while Trump won the Republican primary with 80.5%.

But in all 17 congressional districts, voters chose nominees for the U.S. House of Representatives, as well as delegates to party conventions. Voters across the state also cast ballots for 141 seats in the General Assembly — 118 seats in the Illinois House and 23 in the Illinois Senate. And ballots were cast in county and judicial races.

The second-lowest voter turnout statewide was in 2012, when 23% of registered voters cast ballots. The high-turnout record was 47% in 2016.

City election officials have attributed the low turnout to a lack of competition at the top of the ballot. So did the Cook County Democratic Party; a spokesman said primary turnout in Illinois is not a good predictor of turnout in the general election.

The Latest
The 56th annual Special Olympics Spring Games start Monday at Dunbar Park, 300 E. 31st St., and run through Friday.
MLB
Some players in spring training complained about the fit and look. The white pants worn by some teams are see-through enough to clearly show tucked-in jersey tops.
Three students and two faculty members met with U. of C. president Paul Alivisatos and provost Katherine Baicker to discuss the demands of student organizers, though it “ended without resolution,” according to UChicago United for Palestine, the group organizing the encampment.
La celebración de 10 días desafía la comercialización del Cinco de Mayo, con la esperanza de educar y enriquecer a los habitantes de Chicago sobre la cultura mexicana.
To cut costs and appease the two airlines footing much of the bill, Johnson proposed changing the order of construction. Work on the global terminal replacing Terminal 2 would be moved up, but the building of satellite concourses that would add passenger gates — but increase competition for United and American — would be delayed.