Republicans released a memo today on their view of how absentee and early voting is going so far in the 2012 race for the White House; the bottom line is that the GOP feels good about what the numbers show so far.

Both parties have battled over what the early voting/absentee ballot numbers mean, and whether you can draw conclusions on what the final results will be - the best web site by far on that is one run by Michael McDonald of George Mason University at http://elections.gmu.edu/early_vote_2012.html

Here is the memo from Republican National Committee political director Rick Wiley.

With less than two weeks until Election Day, the unprecedented GOP ground game is producing dramatic results in absentee balloting and early voting (AB/EV) that will give us a critical edge. We will continue to build on this momentum in the next thirteen days, meaning it will be increasingly difficult for Democrats to cobble together the necessary votes.

In the battleground states with available data, Republican AB/EV activity is strong. In addition to raw Republican versus Democrat turnout numbers, there are two key metrics by which we can measure this. First, we can calculate the party's share of AB/EV activity as compared to the party's share of voter registration. The data show the percentage of AB/EV activity from Republicans is greater than the percentage of registered voters which are Republican, indicating higher turnout rates among registered Republicans than among registered Democrats. For example, Republicans are outperforming our share of voter registration in absentee requests and early votes by 5.6 points in Florida, 8.73 points in Ohio, and nearly 12 points in Pennsylvania.

Second, we can measure the party's share of AB/EV activity as compared to its share in 2008. In most cases, the data show Republicans making up a larger share of early voters this year than they did four years ago. Democrats make up a smaller share, giving Republicans an important advantage. Across the eight states, Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by a net 5.85 percentage points, while Republicans are over-performing their share by 2.13 points, yielding a net swing of +7.98 percentage points for Republicans.

In states without party affiliation data, we can still gauge partisan turnout by the overall AB/EV activity rate in Democrat-leaning and Republican-leaning counties as compared to 2008. In many Democrat-heavy counties activity is down from 2008, while in critical Republican-heaving counties, AB/EV activity is up.

In yet another sign of Republican strength, Gov. Romney is winning the independent vote, both on the national level and in key battlegrounds. Both the latest Quinnipiac/CBS News poll and PPP poll in Ohio show Gov. Romney winning independents by 7 points. A recent LVRJ/SurveyUSA poll gave Gov. Romney an 18-point lead with independents in Nevada.

We're not just over-performing with our base; unaffiliated voters are breaking for us too because they recognize that only Gov. Romney offers a real plan and a positive vision for the future. While many of the Democrat ballots cast come from high propensity voters who would vote regardless, the Republican turnout operation has been focused on getting low propensity voters who would otherwise not vote to cast ballots early. As such, turnout for the Romney-Ryan ticket on Election Day will remain as strong as expected.

Past trends in Iowa, North Carolina, and Nevada show that Republicans turn out for early voting in greater numbers as we get closer to Election Day. We've seen that already in Iowa and Ohio, and we are seeing the same trend develop again this year in North Carolina and Nevada, meaning the Republican advantage will grow in coming days.

Moreover, our superior ground game and organization will continue to drive Republicans to vote early right up to Election Day–thanks to the tireless work of over 119,000 volunteers who have already made 28 million voter contacts since our AB/EV turnout program began and 44.8 million contacts total since the spring.

A state-by-state analysis follows.

COLORADO

* Republicans are leading Democrats in absentee ballot requests and early votes by over 10,000 voters.
* Republicans are outperforming voter registration by 2.13 points.
* Republicans won the first day of early voting in Colorado. In 2008, Republicans lost early voting by nearly 4 points.
* Republicans have made 1.5 million volunteer voter contacts in Colorado since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

FLORIDA

* Republicans are leading Democrats in absentee ballot requests by over 44,000 voters.
* Republicans are outperforming voter registration by 5.6 points.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 5.01 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 3.78 points. The result is a net swing of +8.78 percentage points for Republicans.
* Republicans have made over 5.7 million volunteer voter contacts in Florida since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

IOWA

* At this point in 2008, Democrats led by almost 24 points in early voting. Today they lead by 8.3 points, a 65 percent collapse in Democrat support. Almost 5,000 fewer Democrats have voted early this year than had done so at this time in 2008.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 0.41 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 1.23 points. The result is a net swing of +1.65 percentage points for Republicans.
* Republicans have made nearly 1.1 million volunteer voter contacts in Iowa since the AB/EV turnout program began in the state.

MICHIGAN

* AB/EV activity is down from 2008 in Democrat-leaning Washtenaw County (-5.05%).
* AB/EV activity is up in Republican-leaning Ottawa County (7.90%).
* Republicans have made over 1.8 million voter contacts in Michigan since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

NORTH CAROLINA

* Republicans are outperforming our voter registration in absentee requests and early votes by nearly 2 points.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 3.31 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 1.83 points. The result is a net swing of +5.14 percentage points for Republicans.
* Republicans have narrowed the gap with Democrats in One-Stop early voting by 10.51 percentage points compared to the same point in 2008. Republicans have seen 59% growth in early voter turnout compared to 2008, while Democrats have grown by less than 20%.
* Republicans have made nearly 2.2 million volunteer voter contacts in North Carolina since the AB/EV turnout program began in the state.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

* Republicans lead Democrats by over 5 points in absentee ballot requests in New Hampshire's key towns.
* Republicans are outperforming our voter registration in absentee requests by 4 points.
* Republicans have made over 700,000 volunteer voter contacts in New Hampshire since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

NEVADA

* Republicans are outperforming our voter registration in absentee requests and early votes by 4 points.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 2.11 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 2.30 points. The result is a net swing of +4.41 percentage points for Republicans.
* In Clark County, Republicans have narrowed the gap with Democrats in early voting by 13.4 percentage points compared to the same point in 2008.
* Republicans have seen 62% growth in early voter turnout compared to this point in 2008, while Democrats have only seen 14% growth.
* Republicans have made over 1.3 million volunteer voter contacts in Nevada since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

OHIO

* Republicans are outperforming our share of voter registration in absentee requests and early votes by 8.73 points.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 7.60 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 5.94 points. The result is a net swing of +13.54 percentage points for Republicans.
* Republicans have closed the gap on Democrats' historic absentee and early vote advantage for 15 of the past 16 days.
* Republicans have made almost 3.7 million volunteer voter contacts in Ohio since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

PENNSYLVANIA

* Republicans are leading Democrats by over 19,000 absentee requests.
* Republicans are outperforming our share of voter registration in absentee requests by nearly 12 points.
* Democrats are underperforming their share of 2008 AB/EV votes cast by 4.06 percentage points, while the GOP is over-performing their share by 2.10 points. The result is a net swing of +6.16 percentage points for Republicans.
* Republicans have madenearly 3 million volunteer voter contacts in Pennsylvania since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

VIRGINIA

* AB/EV activity is down from 2008 in the Democrat counties of Alexandria (-10.12%), Arlington (-13.38%), Fairfax (-6.03%).
* AB/EV activity is up in Republican-leaning Loudoun County (14.60%).
* Republicans have made more than 2.7 million volunteer voter contacts in Virginia since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

WISCONSIN

* AB/EV activity is down from 2008 the Democrat counties of La Crosse (-19.25%) and Rock (-6.41%)
* AB/EV activity is up the Republican counties of Outagamie (12.06%) and Washington (26.14%).
* On the first day of in-person absentee voting, the Republican bastion of Waukesha County out-voted Dane County, a liberal Democrat stronghold and home to the University of Wisconsin-Madison, despite visits to Madison by high-profile Democrat surrogates and celebrities.
* Republicans have made over 2 million volunteer voter contacts in Wisconsin since the RNC's AB/EV turnout program began nationwide.

Republicans released a memo today on their view of how absentee and early voting is going so far in the 2012 race for the White House; the bottom line is that the GOP feels good about what the numbers show so far. Both parties have battled over what the early ...