Maryland voter registration is keeping with historic trends, according to data from the state Board of Elections, but there are some new and sharp distinctions between the two major parties when it comes to mail-in voting.

In Anne Arundel County on Tuesday, voters who spoke with 11 News had different reasons for casting a ballot early through the mail.

"I just wanted to make sure that mine got directly to where it needed to go, where it was safe and secure," said Shonda Stansbury-Beck, an Anne Arundel County voter.

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"We know that on Election Day, the polls are going to be too crowded and (there's going to be) such a long line that we would probably be out there all day long waiting to vote. So we vote early," said Joe Franklin, an Anne Arundel County voter.

The deadline is ticking closer for Maryland voters who want a mail-in ballot for this year's election. Voters must go online by 11:59 p.m. Tuesday and request a mail-in ballot for the 2020 presidential general election in order to get one.

For voters who request a mail-in ballot online, that doesn't mean they vote online. Instead, they can either have a ballot mailed to them or emailed to them, in which case, the voter has to print the ballot, fill it out and drop it in a ballot dropbox or put it in the mail.

If the process is new to you, the state Board of Elections posted a video tutorial to walk you through a web-based request.

As of Tuesday morning, the SBE said 40% of active registered Maryland voters had been sent a mail-in ballot after requesting one, and 43% of those ballots had been filled out, returned and counted. Read more at WBALTV