BOB SALSBERG, Associated Press
BOSTON (AP) — Low voter turnout is expected for the primary election despite contested races for governor and other statewide offices, the state’s top elections official said Monday.
“I think there hasn’t been a great deal of enthusiasm so far,” Secretary of State William Galvin said.
Treasurer Steven Grossman, Attorney General Martha Coakley and former federal health care administrator Don Berwick are seeking the Democratic nod for governor; former Harvard Pilgrim Health Care executive Charlie Baker and tea party-affiliated business owner Mark Fisher are vying for the Republican nomination in Tuesday’s voting.
Galvin forecast that approximately 550,000 people would vote in the Democratic primary and up to 170,000 would cast ballots in the Republican primary. Total turnout for both parties is unlikely to exceed 15 to 20 percent of the state’s registered voters, he said.
If correct, those numbers would fall significantly short of the 2006 primary election, the last time the incumbent governor wasn’t running and there was a contested Democratic primary that attracted nearly 912,000 voters.
Galvin’s projections were based on the number of absentee ballots cast this year compared to previous years and on the volume of inquiries to his office from voters about issues such as where they should vote.
While skeptical of turnout, “I would be happy to be wrong,” Galvin added.
One factor that he said could drive the numbers up was the success of get-out-the-vote efforts by the candidates, a major focus on the final day before the primary. The candidates were also out greeting potential voters.
Grossman planned stops yesterday in Boston, Peabody, Framingham, Lowell and Newton before ending the day outside Fenway Park. Coakley, who has led in preprimary polls of likely Democratic voters, was also busy with several planned stops in Boston as well as Malden and Arlington. Berwick was scheduled to attend a get-out-the-vote rally in Cambridge on last night.
On the Republican side, Baker planned to join volunteers making calls to voters from his campaign headquarters, while Fisher was scheduled to make several radio and TV appearances before a stop in Hyannis.
About 53 percent of the state’s 4.2 million registered voters are unenrolled in either major party, but under state law they can choose to cast ballots in either the Democratic or Republican primary. Galvin said he did not foresee independent-minded voters showing much interest today.
Besides the race for governor, there are also contested statewide Democratic primaries for attorney general, treasurer and lieutenant governor.
The Democratic contest for attorney general pits former assistant attorney general Maura Healey against former state Sen. Warren Tolman. The winner will face Republican John Miller in November.
Three Democrats are vying for their party’s nomination for treasurer: former Brookline Selectwoman Deborah Goldberg, state Rep. Thomas Conroy of Wayland and state Sen. Barry Finegold of Andover. The winner will face Republican Michael James Heffernan of Wellesley.
There’s also a three-way Democratic primary for lieutenant governor featuring Mike Lake, Stephen Kerrigan and Leland Cheung. Whoever wins will run as a ticket with the winner of the Democratic gubernatorial primary.
Galvin said a general lack of hotly contested local races has also served to dampen voter interest.
“There is not the supporting undercard races to help drive out the turnout,” said Galvin, who cited exceptions in Hampden County in western Massachusetts, which has several open legislative seats and a competitive district attorney’s race, and the 6th Congressional District, where U.S. Rep. John Tierney, D-Salem, is facing several Democratic challengers in the primary.
In Westfield, a city holding primaries for state representative and state senator today, turnout may be slightly above state projections.
City Clerk Karen Fanion and her staff are hoping that city residents will consult with the website of the secretary of state to determine whether they are registered to vote, if they are enrolled with a party and where they’re registered to exercise their constitutional right.
According to the city clerk’s office, there are 12 polling stations open for voting in the city of Westfield, which is divided into six wards.
Both Democratic and Republican primaries will be open from 7 a.m. today until 8 p.m.
Westfield Democrats will also choose between two Holyoke candidates – police officer and real estate agent Patrick Leahy and Fire Commissioner Christopher Hopewell – to challenge incumbent state Sen. Donald Humason, Jr. of Westfield for the 2nd Hampden-Hampshire District seat, who is running unopposed in the Republican primary.
Democrat John Velis is also running unopposed in the race for the 4th Hampden District seat in the state House of Representatives, as is his Republican opponent, Daniel Allie, in a rematch of their April 1 special election to fill the seat vacated by Humason when he defeated Holyoke Democrat David Bartley for his current Senate seat last November.
Westfield voters will be selecting their choice for Hampden County District Attorney today, as well.
With no Republican or Independent candidates in the running, city residents will cast their ballots for one of four Democrats – Shawn Allyn of Agawam, Hal Etkin of Longmeadow, Anthony Gulluni of Springfield or Brett Vottero of Springfield – to become the top law enforcement officer in Hampden County.
Low turnout projected for primary
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