VOTER REGISTRATION DROPS SINCE 2020 DESPITE POPULATION INCREASE

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Commonwealth of Kentucky

Commonwealth of Kentucky
Office of the Secretary of State

 

March 7, 2025

 

Michon Lindstrom 
Director of Communications
michon.lindstrom@ky.gov
502-234-4091

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

VOTER REGISTRATION DROPS SINCE 2020

DESPITE POPULATION INCREASE

February Sees 231,110 Voters Removed

 

Frankfort, Ky. (March 7, 2025) – Secretary of State Michael Adams announced that the number of registered voters in Kentucky has declined significantly since he took office in 2020, despite Kentucky’s rising population in that time. The finding comes after the Commonwealth removed 231,110 ineligible voters in February in compliance with federal and state law.

 

“On my watch we have removed 671,292 ineligible voters from Kentucky’s rolls, including 255,484 deceased voters,” said Adams. “Kentuckians trust our elections, and they should.”

 

Of the 231,110 voters removed, 225,311 were inactive, 5,122 were deceased, 348 had registered to vote in other states, 231 were felony convicts, 38 were adjudged mentally incompetent, 33 were duplicate registrations, and 27 who voluntarily de-registered.

 

Of the 225,311 inactive voters removed, 99,168 were Democrats, 95,732 were Republicans, and 30,411 were registered under other affiliations. The National Voter Registration Act, and Kentucky’s equivalent law, require a multi-year process to remove inactive voters unless they die, are judged mentally incompetent or guilty of a felony, or act to remove themselves.

 

Republican registration accounts for 47 percent of the electorate, with 1,580,776 voters. Republican registration went down by 95,675 voters, a 5.71 percent decrease. Democratic registration constitutes 42 percent of the electorate, with 1,396,723 voters. Democratic registration dropped by 101,942 voters, a 6.8 percent decrease. There are 357,311 voters registered under other political affiliations, making up 11 percent of the electorate. “Other” registration fell by 29,434, a 7.61 percent decrease.

 

 

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