Florida offers 29 Electoral College votes, the most out of all the swing-states considered in this year's presidential election.

Politico's latest swing-state analysis, updated on Nov. 6, showed that Republican Mitt Romney is expected to win all Electoral votes from the state, however, early voting predictions suggest the opposite.

The Associated Press reported tallies of those who voted by mail in their early voting ballot or those who voted that poll sites set up for early voters. The numbers represent how many Democrats and how many Republicans voted early in various states. In Florida, out of the 4.3 millon early voters, 43 percent were registered democrats and 37 percent were Republicans. Although official figures of early votes have not been announced yet, many believe that it is reasonable to predict that the party affiliation of the voter determines who they will vote for in the ballot.

Florida is also the highly-competitive state that caused confusion in the 2000 George Bush vs. Al Gore election, in which the Supreme Court had to intervene and settle the dispute over who won the presidency. The race was known as one of the closest presidential races in America. 

"While Gore garnered a 500,000 vote lead, Florida - the deciding state - was far too close to call, with just 500 votes separating the two candidates," CNBC reported. "Though Gore had won the popular vote, the conservative-leaning Supreme Court stopped the Florida recounts, granting Bush the presidency."

Bush won by only five electoral votes, 271 to 266.

Out of the states included in The AP report of early voters, only Colorado had more Republican early voters than democrats: out of 1.6 million early voters, 37 percent were Republicans and 35 percent were democrats. The numbers are a reversal from four years ago, according to Policy Mic.

Politico noted, based on polling averages provided by RealClearPolitics, that Colorado's nine Electoral votes would go to President Barack Obama.