73 Percent Increase in First Day of Primary Early Voting in Williamson County Compared to 2014

early voting 2018 primary

FRANKLIN, Tennessee–A total of 911 ballots were cast on the first day of primary early voting in Williamson County on Friday, a 73 percent increase from the 526 ballots that were cast in the county on the first day of early voting in the August 2014 primary.

The Brentwood HomePage provided these details:

There are only two locations open for early voting in the county—the Election Commission’s office in Franklin and the Brentwood Library. At the library 340 people voted, while 505 people voted at the office in Franklin.

After adding in votes from absentee ballots and nursing homes, there were 911 people voted Friday. . .

Republicans made up the vast majority of voters. The Williamson County Commission reports that 606 people voted in the Republican primary while 297 voted in the Democratic primary. Eight people voted only in the general election.

Supporters of several candidates, including State Senator Dr. Mark Green (R-Clarksville) , Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN-07) , and Jeff Ford,  stood under a tent just beyond the 100 foot boundary with signs for their candidate of choice at the Williamson County Administrative Building in Franklin.

Green is running unchallenged in the Republican primary to replace Blackburn as the 7th Congressional District’s member of the U.S. House of Representatives. Blackburn faces token opposition in her bid to secure the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate. She will face former Gov. Phil Bredesen, who has no opposition in the Democratic primary, in the November general election.

Jeff Ford is one of several candidates competing in the Republican primary to replace Rep. Charles Sargent (R-Franklin) in the 61st State House District.

One of his opponents in that GOP primary race, Brandon Ogles, along with his wife, were also at the Williamson County Administrative Building on Friday under their own campaign tent with signs for Ogles’ campaign.

In addition to Ogles and Ford, attorney Gino Bulso, and activist Rebecca Burke are candidates in the hard fought Republican primary in the 61st State House District.

Early voting continues until July 28. The primary election date is Thursday, August 2.

 

Related posts

3 Thoughts to “73 Percent Increase in First Day of Primary Early Voting in Williamson County Compared to 2014”

  1. JustLearning

    Its either Diane or Bill… simple as that. I ‘like’ Lee. Nothing wrong with putting a new “good man” in office for a while. DC Diane is well, too DC for me but better than Boyd.

  2. Stuart I. Anderson

    Not particularly good news. It’s too early to get a good read on who is most likely to defeat Randy! so I’m afraid that there are many Williamson County conservatives who are simply voting for who they “like” rather than strategically voting so as to finally bring the Haslam regime to an end.

    Voting for whom you “like” is a luxury reserved for our fellow conservatives in states with runoffs. If you really would like to do that lets twist the arms of our senators and representatives in the General Assembly to give that voting device to us. Otherwise we should be voting so as to do the most good for the future. Randy! Boyd’s election will be nothing more than an eight year extension of the Haslam regime or worse. Please vote strategically by letting the polls tell us how. ANYBODY BUT BOYD!

  3. Kevin

    Maybe it’s because Williamson County’s favorite son, Bill Lee, is running for Governor. It will be telling to see how Lee fares in Williamson vs Black in Sumner vs Boyd in Knox. Although it’s not the home counties that win the election, it helps!

    And we already know that Diane will carry Fairfax and Prince George’s counties. She has for years! And Randy’s employees will undoubtedly turn out in large numbers in Guangdong and Jalisco. For him, it’s like money in the bank!

Comments