This from the WoPo not a friend of the GOP and in the article he says as much, but he can't hide the FACTS...Republican voter turnout in Georgia up 96% while democrap voter up only 29%...the democraps are going to get their ass handed to them in November and the recent primaries are just a sample of what they are installed for...A SERIOUS ASS KICKING!! 
Opinion 
 Democrats, beware. The primaries foretell a spike in GOP turnout.
By  
Henry Olsen
Columnist |
May 19, 2022 at 11:50 a.m. EDT
Most  of the discussion so far about Tuesday’s primary elections has focused  on the ongoing battles between factions within the two parties. But  there’s a bigger story that pundits are missing: Strong turnout in  Republican primaries portends an excellent year for the GOP.
The  pro-GOP pattern is unmistakable. Turnout among Republicans in the 10  states that have held primaries so far is up substantially from the last  comparable election year (either 2018 or earlier depending on the  state). Meanwhile, turnout in Democratic contests is down in five of  those states and up only marginally in most of the others. In total,  according to data compiled by political consultant John Couvillon, GOP turnout is up 32 percent so far while Democratic turnout is down 3 percent.

Some  might argue this simply reflects that the Republican side has more  interesting primaries, but that doesn’t hold up under scrutiny. In  Texas, for example, the Republican contest for governor wasn’t any more  gripping than the Democratic primary, and both parties had hot  congressional primaries. Yet Democratic turnout was up by only 33,000  from 2018 while Republican turnout soared by 404,000. Neither party had a  contested statewide primary in Indiana, yet Democratic turnout was down  while GOP turnout was up by about 15 percent.
Partisan  registration statistics in these states have also been moving in the  Republican direction. Registered North Carolina Democrats outnumbered  Republicans by more than 
570,000 on the eve of the 2018 primaries. Today, they lead by 
less than 300,000. Kentucky Democrats had a 
10 percent lead  in registered voters when Donald Trump took office; today their lead is  down to under one point. Republicans have added nearly 450,000  registered voters in Pennsylvania 
since 2014; Democrats have lost nearly 90,000.The primary turnout numbers merely confirm what data have been foreshadowing for years.Data on partisan identification from many polls also show a trend favoring the GOP. Gallup’s 
end-of-year poll  made headlines when it found a big shift toward Republicans during  2021. Other polls have shown a significant, if less pronounced, shift in  partisan voter identification since President Biden took office. The  weekly Politico-Morning Consult poll, for example, had a 
43-30 Democrat-Republican split in late January 2021. The most recent poll had only a 
37-35 Democratic advantage. The Monmouth University poll has moved from a nine-
point Democratic advantage right after Biden’s inauguration to a 
three-point Republican  lead in its most recent survey. One can quibble with the precise  magnitude of the change, but the direction is clearly toward the GOP.
It  shouldn’t be surprising that more people vote in Republican primaries  when an increasing number of people identify and register as  Republicans. The primary turnout data are lagging indicators of what is  plainly in front of our noses: Despite what many talking heads want to  believe, the average voter right now sees the GOP as a legitimate  expression of their ideals.
Republicans  shouldn’t get cocky. Many of the people who are turning to them now  were happy to back Democrats a short time ago. Biden intends to make the  GOP the focus of this year’s campaign cycle to win back these wavering  voters. This type of effort often falls short in midterms, as voters  want to register their views on the person in the White House. But  President Ronald Reagan’s success in holding GOP congressional losses  down when his job approval ratings were near their nadir in November  1982 shows such an approach can have an impact. Time  can only tell what will happen. In the meantime, the sharp hike in  Republican primary turnout reinforces other data showing the party is on  the rise. If this trend continues as the rest of the country votes in  primaries, expect a banner year for the GOP.
Opinion by 
Henry Olsen
Henry Olsen is a Washington Post columnist and a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.