Publication | Open Access
The relationship between <scp>in‐person</scp> voting and <scp>COVID</scp>‐19: Evidence from the Wisconsin primary
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Citations
19
References
2021
Year
Public PolicyPresidential Primary ElectionSmart VotingWisconsin PrimaryVoting BehaviorApril 7SociologyPublic OpinionSocial SciencesPolitical BehaviorPublic HealthStatisticsElection ForecastingEpidemiologyIn-person Voting DensityCovid-19
On April 7, 2020, Wisconsin held its presidential primary election, and news reports showed long lines of voters due to fewer polling locations. We use county-level variation in voting patterns and weekly county-level COVID test data to examine whether in-person voting increased COVID-19 cases. We find a statistically significant association between in-person voting density and the spread of COVID-19 2-3 weeks after the election. In our main results, a 10% increase in in-person voters per polling location is associated with an 18.4% increase in the COVID-19 positive test rate 2-3 weeks later.
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