Mary Jo Pitzl

The Republic | azcentral.com

Would-be voters have burned up the registration forms since the Aug. 30 primary election. The Arizona Secretary of State's Office reported a 5.5 percent increase in the voter rolls since the Aug. 30 primary election, with 187,855 people signing up to vote.

For voters — whether new or tenured — who have an early ballot, elections officials are urging them to mail it back to their county recorder by Tuesday. (Nov. 1) After that, voters should walk their ballot into any polling place on Nov. 8.

So what allegiance are these new registrants showing? Republicans have hung on to their status as the state's largest party, edging out independents by about 20,000 voters.

The registration flurry showed Democrats increased their rolls by a greater percentage than the GOP. But the Greens made the percentage biggest gain, swelling their comparatively tiny rolls by 25 percent. Here's how the numbers break down by party:

Republicans: up 4.6 percent to a total of 1,239,614 voters.

up 4.6 percent to a total of 1,239,614 voters. Independents: up 1.6 percent, for 1,219,277 voters.

up 1.6 percent, for 1,219,277 voters. Democrats: Registration is up 7 percent, a total of 1,091,323 voters.

Registration is up 7 percent, a total of 1,091,323 voters. Libertarian Party: up 17.7 percent, to 31,358 voters.

up 17.7 percent, to 31,358 voters. Green Party: up 25 percent, to 6,894 voters.

The overall increase in registered voters is the largest since 2008, when Barack Obama and John McCain were running for president. Eight years ago, voter rolls jumped 6.7 percent in two months, adding 188,061 voters.

For more voter-registration data, visit the Secretary of State's website.

Reach the reporter at maryjo.pitzl@arizonarepublic.com and follow her on Twitter, @maryjpitzl.

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