Wednesday, August 11, 2004

Maine Get-Out-The-Vote Maps

FairVote2020 has developed an interactive map showing turnout by towns and cities for the 2000 presidential election.

Other maps show results by town in head-to-head Bush-Gore and Bush-Kerry contests. Political data is available for civil divisions, encompassing over 99% of Maine's population. Blank areas on the map have no population or missing data.

Additional maps include census data on poverty, housing and income. Change maps by clicking the drop-down menu under "Compare Maps" on the left.


Turnout by City/Town in 2000 Presidential Election (18 + Pop)


Map 1 (initial map) -- Turnout by City/Town in 2000 (18+ Pop)

At a scale of about 50 miles, the number of voting age persons (by town or city) who did not vote in the 2000 presidential election is displayed in purple boxes.

Click on the INFO tool and then on the map for a pop-up window displaying town-level turnout and political data. Click on ZOOM TO and then on the map to display neighborhood-level (block group) socioeconomic data in a table beneath the map image.

Data is available for 494 civil divisions, encompassing over 99% of Maine's population. Blank areas on the map have no population or missing data.

Note: Block group boundaries cannot be displayed in Maps 1 and 19 Civil division boundaries cannot be displayed in Maps 2 thru 18

Sources: Census 2000, Dave Leip's Atlas of US Presidential Elections

Maps 2 through 17 -- Block-Group Socio-Economic Detail Maps

See SocioEcon mapper for map details.

Sources: Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data and SF 3 Sample Data

Map 18 -- Bush-Gore by Town

Head-to-head contest (minus third party votes)

Sources: Dave Leip's Atlas of US Presidential Elections

Map 19 -- Bush-Kerry by Town

Head-to-head contest (minus third party votes)

Sources: Dave Leip's Atlas of US Presidential Elections

Map 20 -- Party Affiliation (State Senate) 2007

Map 21 -- Party Affiliation (State House) 2007

Map 22 -- Party Affiliation (Congress) 2007

Tuesday, August 10, 2004

Delaware Get-Out-The-Vote Maps

FairVote2020 has developed an interactive map showing turnout in Delaware for the 2000 presidential election. Another map shows results by precinct in a head-to-head Bush-Gore contest.

Additional maps include census data on race, ethnicity and income. Change maps by clicking the drop-down menu under "Compare Maps" on the left.


Turnout in 2000 Presidential Election (18+ pop.)

Zoom to:
Wilmington
Dover

Map 1 (default map) -- Percent Turnout in Delaware 2000 (by 2000 precinct)

At a scale of about 3 miles, the number of voting age persons (by precinct) who did not vote in the 2000 election is displayed in purple boxes. This number includes both registered and unregistered persons and has not been adjusted for non-citizens. Precinct boundaries are those in effect in 2000.

At a scale of about 3 miles, pie charts display in areas with significant minority population, showing race/ethnicity components for the over 18 population.

Note: Percent turnout is calculated using the population 18 and over. Votes cast is calculated based on votes for presidential candidates.

Sources: Census 2000, Federal Elections Project, American University.

Maps 2 thru 17 -- Block-Group Socio-Economic Detail Maps

See SocioEcon mapper for map details.

Sources: Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data and SF 3 Sample Data

Note: Block group boundaries cannot be displayed in Map 1. Precinct boundaries cannot be displayed in Maps 2 thru 17

.Map 18 -- Bush-Gore by Precinct

Head-to-head contest (minus third party votes)

Sources: Census 2000, Federal Elections Project, American University.

Monday, August 9, 2004

New Hampshire Get-Out-The-Vote Maps

FairVote2020 has developed an interactive map showing turnout by towns and city precincts for the 2000 presidential election.

Data is available for 314 civil divisions, encompassing over 99% of New Hampshire's population. Blank areas on the map have no population or missing data.

Map 18 shows results by precinct/town in a head-to-head Bush-Gore contest. Map 19 shows precinct/town results for the Bush-Kerry 2004 presidential election.

Additional maps include census data on poverty, housing and income. Change maps by clicking the drop-down menu under "Compare Maps" on the left.

Turnout by Precinct/Town in 2000 Presidential Election (18 + Pop)

Map 1 (initial map) -- Turnout by Precinct/Town in 2000 (18+ Pop)

At a scale of about 10 miles, the number of voting age persons (by town or city) who did not vote in the 2000 presidential election is displayed in purple boxes.

Data is available for 314 civil divisions, encompassing over 99% of New Hampsire's population. Blank areas on the map have no population or missing data.

Note: Block group boundaries cannot be displayed in Maps 1 and 19 Civil division boundaries cannot be displayed in Maps 2 thru 18

Sources: Census 2000, Federal Elections Project, American University.

Maps 2 through 17 -- Block-Group Socio-Economic Detail Maps

See SocioEcon mapper for map details.

Sources: Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data and SF 3 Sample Data

Map 18 -- Bush-Gore by Precinct/Town

Head-to-head contest (minus third party votes)

Sources: Census 2000, Federal Elections Project, American University

Map 19 -- Bush-Kerry by Precinct/Town

Head-to-head contest (minus third party votes)

View and annotate this map in Google Maps

Source: New Hampshire Secretary of State

Map 20 -- Party Affiliation (State Senate) 2007

Map 21 -- Party Affiliation (State House) 2007

Map 22 -- Party Affiliation (Congress) 2007


High Detail "Zoomable"-- Adobe format -- zoom to 200+)

Birds-eye view of turnout for the 18+ population in the 2000 general election. The numbers displayed in purple boxes show unregistered 18+ and non-voting registered voters, i.e. everyone over 18 who did not vote. These maps match the default map in the interactive map described above.

Community-wide Bush Gore Maps

Bush-Gore by precinct (head to head contest excluding third party candidates). The numbers in boxes show votes cast for the two major party candidates.