Poll:Have you voted

Have you voted?

  • Voted Early in Person

    Votes: 57 27.0%
  • Mailed ballot in

    Votes: 61 28.9%
  • Will Vote on Election Day

    Votes: 85 40.3%
  • Don't plan on voting

    Votes: 8 3.8%

  • Total voters
    211
  • Poll closed .
Illinois
No lines, voting 100 yds from house in our senior community common room. Only contested candidates... President, circuit judge and county clerk... all others uncontested... Penny tax referendum for schools...
Home, vote, back home 15 minutes including the short walk.

Proforma and habit...
 
Since I had to run some errands anyway, I decided to vote, even though everything is essentially pre-determined on this particular ballot.

But I did get a warm feeling all over - though I attribute that to the young lady in line ahead of me who really knows how to wear a pair of jeans ;)

"Sir, we can take you over here" - "No, I'm fine, thank you" :)

And just think - - NO MORE POLITICAL ROBO-CALLS! :D They have already stopped at my house.

Amen - starting tomorrow I'll be updating my 'selective forward list' on my phone system, which I have set to forward those calls to the FTC Do-Not-Call list complaint hot-line. Figured I couldn't keep up with the political calls (which are not 'violations' anyhow, due to our politician's 'above the law' attitudes), so I'll just get the telemarketers on that list.

-ERD50
 
REWahoo said:
Your situation appears to be not that unusual. I noticed two pairs of "loaner" reading glasses on the table by the voting booths.

That's funny. Sounds like a voter friendly place. Good to know there is a place that takes care of us 50 year olds. Young enough to still see somewhat without them, but old enough to be forgetful to bring them.
 
20 minute drive to the Fire House to vote at 10:30 AM, Ms G was #29 I was #30 voter. More poll workers than voters. We walked to the Post Office, we had a package that had been there for 3 weeks to pick up. Went next door to the Library, Ms G checked out a couple of books. Drove back home by way of our other Post Office, spent about 20 minutes gabbing with the neighbors, than home just in time for lunch.
 
Yep. 25th voter this morning.
 
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DW and I voted absentee as we're 1500 miles away. Going out to find a bar with no TV to spend the night. We'll check in tomorrow to see what's new.
 
I live in a small town and vote for local, state and national elections. I have never seen such a mad house before! Usually I walk in show and id and vote sometimes there are 4 or 5 people in line, today the line was dozens of people long. I never spent so much time voting here. I went as always about 11:15 am so I miss the voters on their way to work and when most everyone is in work, an astounding number of people at town hall. This is not a state that is up for grabs it is solidly decided so it isn't like this is a big deal here. Crazy! :confused:
 
I voted on my way home from the gym .It took ten minutes . Thankfully today the calls and political mail will stop.
 
What? Nobody voted by phone?


We just got one of the newest "vote by phone" scam calls.

"If you haven't voted yet, you can vote over the phone. I'll jut need to verify your identity with a major credit card number..."

The calls are using spoofed caller IDs. In our case, the scammer used the name of a Houston telecom equipment company, and the number of a software business in Fort Worth, the same ones used in a "your computer has a virus" scam from early October.

I need to just route Caller ID right into Google, and display the results at the phone. This could make for great improv. Hilarity ensues...
 
I decided to vote, even though everything is essentially pre-determined on this particular ballot.

-ERD50

Same thing here in IL. I hope it would make any difference. Voted electronically (no paper ballot). No lines when I came in but a line formed after I was done voting. I did not vote for uncontested positions nor for retention of judges. Or for a position that was for another county. I don't know how it got on the ballot. The election judges didn't know either.
 
Having the sample ballot with me as a guide saved mucho time... since CA is the land of a a gazillion propositions.

I did not bring a sample ballot with me, but our local village newspaper printed a generic ballot last week. Here in New York with its weird ballot laws, candidates may appear on multiple lines of the ballot, so we often have the choice of which line to vote for our preferred candidates. Knowing which additional lines my preferred candidates are on before I got to the polling place helped save some time at the polling place later.

And in a sign of the times (for me), I have had to squint more and more to read the darned thing LOL!
 
Since I had to run some errands anyway, I decided to vote, even though everything is essentially pre-determined on this particular ballot.

Same here. In my area of New York State, most contests will be landslides, from president, Senator, House, state senate, to state assembly, all incumbents will win by 10-20 points. Some of the local judicial races will be close but others won't be.
 
DH and I voted around 1pm. No worries. About 30 minutes in line total.

Here's the story I'd like to relate to all of my friends here. My 82 year old mom was a bit worried - about the possibility of long lines, cold weather here in Virginia, and possibly other complications. I offered to take her but she refused. She likes her independence and only accepts offers of help when there are no other alternatives.

She showed up at her voting center around 10AM, noticed a long line and was a bit concerned. After her hip replacement surgery a number of years ago, it's hard for her to stand for a long period of time.

A nice young man noticed her standing in line with her cane and approached her. He was a volunteer helping with the election. He asked her if she would like to take a seat and offered to bring her a paper ballot to complete. She was relieved and agreed readily.

In a few minutes he was back with a paper ballot on a clip board and a pen in hand. The clip board even had a cover sheet to protect her privacy. She filled it out, handed it back to him, and watched him place in the box where the paper ballots went.

This warmed my heart. My mother has never missed an election since she was first old enough to vote. She grew up in Kansas and remembers her mother and grandmother talking about when women first got the right to vote.

Right now DH and I are relieved this election will (hopefully) be over soon. Mom is too. :)
 
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Took me 5 minutes to vote here in GA this afternoon. Not much of a mystery which way this state will go and the rest of the ballot was a total waste of space. One Congressional race and about 10 local positions with only one person on the ballot.

What bugs me that we have so much technology but I have to get a paper form, go fill that out (name, address, DOB, signature), return and show the paper at one table, go to another table where they look at the paper and look at my driver's license, then go to another table where the look again, put the paper away and scan my license. Couldn't they just scan my license in the first place and eliminate all this paper? The whole process could have taken 30 seconds.
 
Voted this morning in my small town in Michigan. No lines, only took about 10 minutes or so. The presidential race will probably not be close here, but some other races (US Senate, state legislators) will be, so I definitely wanted to cast my ballot. We also have 6 statewide ballot proposals, and some of those may be quite close also. It'll be tomorrow before I hear most of the results...........I'm not one for staying up late to find out.
 
Oh my God. This election is going to be close... Watching both CNN and MSNBC at the same time. Fascinating.
 
Oh my God. This election is going to be close... Watching both CNN and MSNBC at the same time. Fascinating.

Me too. It's going to be a nailbiter all night long I think.
 
obgyn65 said:
Well not so long after all :)

After all is said and done, the results very much tracked what most polls have been saying all along.
 
obgyn65 said:
Well not so long after all :)

Oh, the re-presidenting process is just getting started. We've got the recounting, the litigation, and the recriminations to get through.
 
Very curious to see if Amendment 64 passes, although I suspect it would change little.
Looks like it passed. Your move to Colorado now appears prescient. Bet you're going to start hearing from old friends offering to come visit...:)
 
I live in a small town and vote for local, state and national elections. I have never seen such a mad house before! Usually I walk in show and id and vote sometimes there are 4 or 5 people in line, today the line was dozens of people long. I never spent so much time voting here. I went as always about 11:15 am so I miss the voters on their way to work and when most everyone is in work, an astounding number of people at town hall. This is not a state that is up for grabs it is solidly decided so it isn't like this is a big deal here. Crazy! :confused:
The lines were much longer on DC's Capitol Hill this year even though the DC results in the Presidential election are a certainty. I think people took this election very much to heart and wanted to participate regardless of the likely impact of their individual vote. Be interesting to see how the turnout stacks up when all the results are in.
 
Looks like it passed. Your move to Colorado now appears prescient. Bet you're going to start hearing from old friends offering to come visit...:)

Unless I am very much mistaken, the main result is that the state and local police forces stop wasting resources chasing people with a joint. The rest will take a long time and is subject to interference from the feddle gubmint.
 
Unless I am very much mistaken, the main result is that the state and local police forces stop wasting resources chasing people with a joint. The rest will take a long time and is subject to interference from the feddle gubmint.
My post was tongue in cheek. Possession of any amount remains a federal criminal offense. The impact on local law enforcement can be meaningful, reducing cost or freeing resources for other priorities.
 
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