Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Boiler
(Post 12926194)
Pelosi's comment about a glass of water would win in her district if it had a D on it.
Sorry thought that was well known. https://www.newsweek.com/pelosi-alex...strict-1397640 Nancy Pelosi: Glass of Water Could Take Districts Like Mine and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's—'That's Not Where We Have to Win the Election' |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Steerpike
(Post 12926149)
I really wish you'd provide context. I have NO IDEA what you are talking about.
|
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Steerpike
(Post 12926201)
No, I had not heard that. Here's a link with more context:
https://www.newsweek.com/pelosi-alex...strict-1397640 Nancy Pelosi: Glass of Water Could Take Districts Like Mine and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's—'That's Not Where We Have to Win the Election' |
Re: 2020 Election
Well Pelosi certainly isn't wrong there.
My voting district is the same, there is no way a republican would win, the republicans put little effort even trying, the last 3 elections its been the same Republican running. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Boiler
(Post 12926194)
Pelosi's comment about a glass of water would win in her district if it had a D on it.
Sorry thought that was well known. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Boiler
(Post 12926132)
Does anybody believe that Biden will not win? Well think it is other than a remote possibility he will lose.
Time will tell. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by cranston
(Post 12926228)
I believe that enough people are telling pollsters lies on who they are voting for that Trump wins this. The polling industry is dead.
Time will tell. |
Re: 2020 Election
My county is already showing 44% turnout. Of 712k registered voters 315k already voted. I wonder what that means!
|
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by username.exe
(Post 12926231)
I think there are a lot of people too embarrassed to admit publicly that they will vote for Trump.
|
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by RICH
(Post 12926234)
My county is already showing 44% turnout. Of 712k registered voters 315k already voted. I wonder what that means!
So, your neighbour in his squarely red county can report that we have had a 41.04% turnout of eligible voters. Those who have voted are: 48,552 (of 118,375) registered Republicans; 41,213 (of 83,648) registered Democrats; 22,455 ( of 71,404) other. Breaking that down even further: Republican: 30,405 (mail), 18,742 (in person) Democrat: 32,927 (mail), 8,942 (in person) Other: 16,317 (mail), 6,513 (in person) Note that nearly half the registered Democrats have already voted, compared with just over two-fifths of Republicans and under a third of the rest. The comparison between mailers and in person voters makes for interesting perusal, one should not forget that this is a county where I can, if I were bloody stupid enough, shop in stores without a mask being required and you wouldn't know that the world were in the grip of a pandemic if it weren't for the appearance of masked persons in the supermarkets - not that this goon goes in them very often as one of the first things the missus did when the apocalypse struck was to fork out for home delivered shopping. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Steerpike
(Post 12926201)
No, I had not heard that. Here's a link with more context:
https://www.newsweek.com/pelosi-alex...strict-1397640 Nancy Pelosi: Glass of Water Could Take Districts Like Mine and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's—'That's Not Where We Have to Win the Election'Anyhoo, it's a great reference. When I made my comment about Graham, I wasn't thinking about Pelosi but that is exactly what I meant and exactly what she meant when she said it. I remember thinking at the time that it was an odd thing for a politician to admit but it was a true statement. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by username.exe
(Post 12926176)
I enjoy reading the voting anecdotes. I naturalized just over two years ago, so I voted in the midterms, the primaries for this year, and the general election just this week.
First time was on election day, at the local school: 10 minutes wait, half a block walk. Second time was in my neighbors' garage, on election day, not even a stones' throw from my house: no wait at all. This time I voted early, midweek in some sort of veterans' bar that was open late: no wait. Lots of Gadsden flags and pro-conservative paraphernalia, and just an official box on a counter with a zipper that you stuff your ballot in to. I opted-in to ballot tracking and received a text message to confirm my ballot has been received and counted. I have to say, I love voting here. The system seems to work, there's a high degree of civic engagement with community members helping to make it possible, they make early voting easy, and I don't have to fret over whether my ballot has been missed or counted. The only thing that pisses me off is watching news reports of people who have to stand in line for hours upon hours in order to cast their ballots; the one thing, regardless of party affiliation, that we should all agree on - make it easy for people to participate in democracy. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Leslie
(Post 12926257)
Thanks for this uplifting post. I love your story and I also love to vote here. Voting is always good even when it's bad --- meaning long lines or rude election workers :lol: It is a shared experience like no other. I hope more BEers tell their voting experience in whatever way see fit --- I love to read about the scenes in the different states.
|
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Lion in Winter
(Post 12926267)
This year my voting was a rather dull "stick it in the mail". Normally I vote in person and on the day and the people running the polls are always lovely and very keen. My polling place is in a little community house in a park. The first time I voted in this country they were thrilled to have a newbie and having to show me how to operate the machine etc. In 08 I took the then 9-year-old Little Lion into the voting booth with me so he could see how it was done and watch me vote for the first black President the country had ever had, historic by any measure.
The election was hilarious with peanuts and horse teeth choppers being the fashion. The Democrats wouldn't let me work without permission from my parents :rolleyes:. My mother, who was pregnant with my youngest sister, went down there (it was a couple of blocks from our house) and checked out the whole thing and said it was okay. She knew most of the people down there and that's how things were back then. They tried to recruit her and she wasn't having any of it --- IIRC she was already grumpy about being dragged there but my parents rarely told me "no" when I got something in my head. I stuffed envelopes and hung door hangers. I was sincere and idealistic in a childlike way but, still to this day, haven't wavered on Jimmy Carter. I didn't become a Democrat but I did stay interested in politics. |
Re: 2020 Election
Originally Posted by Lion in Winter
(Post 12926267)
This year my voting was a rather dull "stick it in the mail". Normally I vote in person and on the day and the people running the polls are always lovely and very keen. My polling place is in a little community house in a park. The first time I voted in this country they were thrilled to have a newbie and having to show me how to operate the machine etc. In 08 I took the then 9-year-old Little Lion into the voting booth with me so he could see how it was done and watch me vote for the first black President the country had ever had, historic by any measure.
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 8:53 pm. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.