News
HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.
News
Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend
News
What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?
News
MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal
News
Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options
On Tuesday, voters will head to the polls for the special-election primary to fill the state’s vacated U.S. Senate seat. But experts predict that turnout will be low in the election to pick between either party-line-Democrat Edward J. Markey and his underdog, more moderate challenger Stephen F. Lynch, or a diverse slate of Republican hopefuls.
If all goes as predicted by pollsters and pundits, Markey, a 37-year veteran of the House of Representatives, will defeat Rep. Lynch of South Boston. Markey has raised over three times more in campaign funds and has also secured the endorsements of a host of leading Democrats, including the former senior Senator from Massachusetts, John F. Kerry, whose appointment as Secretary of State vacated the contested seat.
After Massachusetts Secretary of State William F. Galvin estimated on Monday that about 120,000 fewer voters would cast ballots in this Democratic primary than did in the 2009 special election primary for senate, Daniel B. Payne, a Democratic media consultant who has worked for Markey, said that the conditions seemed to favor the longtime congressman from Malden.
“In a low turnout election, the core of the Massachusetts Democrats are going to be the ones who turnout,” Payne said Monday afternoon. “[Low turnout] helps Ed Markey because Ed Markey has been organizing since February, and he’s going to have 5,000 people working for him tomorrow.”
Andrew Zucker, a spokesperson for Markey, was also optimistic about Markey’s prospects.
“We’re confident in our grassroots field operation,” he wrote in an email. “It’s the strongest by far of any campaign in this state.” Zucker added that 9,000 volunteers were active in the Markey campaign.
Lynch, who was off the campaign trail due to illness for most of Monday, had been campaigning at a breakneck pace for the last week of the race. The campaigns had shuttered down after the bombings on Marathon Monday, but largely restarted after the alleged bombers were apprehended.
Though recent polls have shown him trailing Markey by about 10 points, Lynch, whose supporter base is seen as solid and dependable, predicted a narrow victory last week after a debate in Springfield.
Payne said that in order for Lynch to pull off the upset, he will need an extremely high turnout in and around his South Boston voter-base, and will also need to keep pace with Markey in affluent suburbs surrounding the city.
“If Newton has a decent turnout and a big margin for Markey, Markey is going to win big,” Payne said. “If it’s a low turnout and the margin is a little closer, that bodes well for Lynch.”
On the Republican side, Harvard Business School graduate and former Navy SEAL Gabriel E. Gomez has raised more money than former U.S. Attorney Michael J. Sullivan and State Rep. Daniel B. Winslow combined and leads in a recent poll.
Gomez campaign spokesperson Will Ritter that he was encouraged by an estimate from Secretary of State Galvin that turnout in the Republican primary would be higher than in 2009 by about 35,000 voters.
“[Higher turnout] means that there are people who are hearing about the election because they are interested in Gabriel Gomez, in our message, and in a candidate who is different,” Ritter told The Crimson on Monday night.
Joseph Selvaggi, a Republican who challenged Lynch in the 8th congressional district race last November, was not as optimistic about the projected turnout, which he said might not be high enough to be a game changer for Gomez.
“I don’t think the people will show up to vote in the way that the Gomez campaign thinks they will,” Selvaggi said, adding that a low turnout would probably favor Sullivan, who is seen as the most uniformly conservative of the Republicans.
Colin Graham, a spokesperson for Winslow, dismissed claims that the low turnout would benefit the most conservative candidate.
“We’ve made over 150,000 live—not automated—calls to likely GOP voters,” Graham wrote in an email. “In a low turnout election, that kind of investment is going to pay huge dividends.”
Despite weak performances in public polling, Winslow, who is considered the most liberal of the Republican candidates, has won the endorsements of the Boston Globe, the Boston Herald, and the Springfield Republican, and a recent advertisement from his campaign claims that he has been endorsed by every major paper in Massachusetts.
Graham said that daily internal polling conducted by the Winslow campaign showed the race close between the three Republicans.
“Some days Sullivan is on top, sometimes Winslow,” Graham said of the surveys. “Our tracking shows Gomez having the least amount of identified, confirmed voters.”
Polls open at 7 a.m. Tuesday morning and close at 8 p.m. in the evening. The winner of the Democratic primary will face the winner of the Republican primary in a special election on June 25.
—Staff writer Matthew Q. Clarida can be reached at clarida@college.harvard.edu. Follow him on Twitter @MattClarida.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.