“Needless to say, what I hope we’ll be seeing is a very large voter turnout,” Democratic presidential contender Bernie Sanders told an Oregon newspaper over the weekend ahead of the state’s closed primary on Tuesday.

It seems the Vermont senator may get his wish, with Oregon Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins saying Monday that voters are on track to cast more than one million votes in a primary election for only the second time in state history. The first time, according to The Oregonian, was in 2008 and “was driven most acutely by Obama-crazed voters wanting a say in the Hillary Clinton-Barack Obama primary show-down.”

But while the state’s automatic voter registration and vote-by-mail systems are helping make Oregon’s elections “more accessible and convenient for voters,” as Jonathan Brater of the Brennan Center wrote in April, it’s not all good news for Sanders—despite his decisive win in next-door Washington state in March, Oregon’s progressive bent, and the endorsement of U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley.

That’s because the “so-called ‘motor voter’ law…hasn’t made it much easier to participate in Oregon’s closed primary on Tuesday,” the Associated Press reported last week. Sanders, who acknowledges that he fares better when independent and “non-traditional” voters are allowed to cast ballots, has yet to win a closed primary, or one restricted only to voters who are registered as Republican or Democrat.

The AP continued:

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