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Turnout records fall even in GOP-friendly statesStaff and agencies
An aggressive and well-financed get-out-the-vote campaign helped Obamas campaign mobilize unprecedented numbers of African-American and new voters who could help decide the presidential election by swinging states like North Carolina and Virginia to the Democrat. "It may not shift Alabama from red to blue, or shift Tennessee from red to blue," Ferrel Guillory, an expert in Southern politics at the University of North Carolina, said of the turnout projections. "But it could have an effect over the long term." In Alabama, a state that has gone consistently Republican in presidential elections since picking Ronald Reagan in 1980, Obamas army of volunteers conducted voter registration drives that helped push the states voter rolls past 3 million for the first time, and they registered blacks at a faster rate than whites. The story is similar in Tennessee, which saw many more early voters than in 2004, especially in Democratic-leaning counties; and in South Carolina, where records fell for both registration and absentee voting. "I think we have very good prospects to pick up a congressional seat or two," said his Democratic counterpart, Carol Fowler. Nebraska, which has given all five of its electoral votes to Republicans in every election since 1964, fell just 3,000 short of a record for voter registration, but Secretary of State John Gale was forecasting record turnout anyway. Nebraska is one of two states that can split its electoral votes, and Obama opened three offices in Omaha to try to shave off one of those votes. McCains selection of Palin was critical to building enthusiasm among the partys traditional base, said Merle Black, a political scientist at Emory University in Atlanta. Early voting in Oklahoma set an all-time high, and a record turnout on Election Day appeared likely, according to Mike Clingman, election board secretary. Polls there have shown Obama getting about a third of the vote, about the same as John Kerry four years ago. State Democratic Party Chairman Ivan Holmes is expecting a strong Obama turnout in urban areas, but he anticipates a backlash in some conservative areas where the candidates race may be a factor "especially among older voters." Texas saw its voter registration hit a record 13.5 million this year. But neither presidential candidate spent much time in a state that has gone Republican in every election since 1980. Randall Dillard, spokesman for the secretary of state, said both sides were driving the registration boom. "History can be made," he said, "no matter how this race goes." ___ Associated Press writers Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C., Erik Schelzig in Nashville, Tenn., Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, Lou., Joe Biesk in Louisville, Ky., Liz White in Salt Lake City, Utah, Kelly Shannon in Austin, Texas, Anna Jo Bratton in Omaha, Neb., and Ron Jenkins in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.
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