Is Trump really the landlord? Typically a condo developer sells the units to the owners, who then form a condo association with a board of directors that hires a management company to maintain it...
Trump International Realty is the premier luxury full-service brokerage headquartered in New York City. Leveraging its global brand recognition, real estate vision and tremendous resources, Trump International Realty delivers a level of distinctive services unparalleled in the industry... Link to Trump site
I've never lived in a condo but my impression was, in addition to serving as the building's management the Trump organization owns the building; individual tenants own apartments within it. My friend had previously lived in Battery Park City -- he had to move out after 9/11 when the building became uninhabitable -- and that's when he bought the Trump apartment. He said there was no comparison between the standards maintained or the level of service Trump supplies. Again, my biggest surprise was that Donald Trump was personally involved and came across as very personable and approachable.
This is one of Trump's successful businesses:
I suspect that lever will be working the other way from now on.Trump International Realty is the premier luxury full-service brokerage headquartered in New York City. Leveraging its global brand recognition ...
You would be a twisted, tortured shrivel, too, and maybe you’d lash out and try to take cruel revenge on the universe. For Trump this is his whole life.[/INDENT]
ETA: My dictionary doesn't seem to recognize "shrivel" as a noun.
You'd think so, but if he's providing a quality service for a quality price where's his edge?
Question for American voters: when you vote for President, do you vote for the Senate and Congress at the same time? On the same ballot?
And if so, how do you rate someone voting for the President of one party and Senate/Congress of a different party?
Common
50/50
Hardly ever
Thank you for answering.
Yes. But the senate is staggard some, we only elect some of the senators every two years as they have 6 year terms.Question for American voters: when you vote for President, do you vote for the Senate and Congress at the same time?
Generally yes, but sometimes there's enough things to vote on that you have to fill out two different ballots. That happened in several areas in FL in 2012. Hence when you see claims of "more ballots were cast in <insert county in FL> than registered voters, therefore Obama stole the election", that's what happened.On the same ballot?
And if so, how do you rate someone voting for the President of one party and Senate/Congress of a different party?
Common
50/50
Hardly ever
Yes. But the senate is staggard some, we only elect some of the senators every two years as they have 6 year terms.
Generally yes, but sometimes there's enough things to vote on that you have to fill out two different ballots. That happened in several areas in FL in 2012. Hence when you see claims of "more ballots were cast in <insert county in FL> than registered voters, therefore Obama stole the election", that's what happened.
Somewhere between 50/50 and hardly ever. It's very common for voters to just select the entire slate of candidates from a party that conforms to the party of their selected candidate in the highest profile race. In a lot of places, there's literally a button you can push to select all the candidates of given party. A lot of people just do that.
That's why a lot of republicans are trying to distance themselves as much as they can from Trump. They are trying their hardest to convince Hillary voters to not just vote Dem across the board.
Are you talking about plebiscites here? Such as legalizing marijuana?
I live in Philadelphia, PA. Our ballots will have two questions on it.Are you talking about plebiscites here? Such as legalizing marijuana?
Question for American voters: when you vote for President, do you vote for the Senate and Congress at the same time? On the same ballot?
And if so, how do you rate someone voting for the President of one party and Senate/Congress of a different party?
Common
50/50
Hardly ever
Question for American voters: when you vote for President, do you vote for the Senate and Congress at the same time? On the same ballot?
And if so, how do you rate someone voting for the President of one party and Senate/Congress of a different party?
Common
50/50
Hardly ever
Thank you for answering.
All Reps every 2 years. Senators - one third of them every two years. All on same ballot, plus lots of local elections/issues on the ballot as well.
I have always been willing to split between President and Congress. It always surprises me when I see people always voting for 1 party. Some ballots allow you to do this with one mark, others do not.
Ah. the famously long ballot papers.
Some states, like CA, make it a lot easier to get various measures on the ballot. So they can have a lot of various questions on them that, yes, can include whether or not to legalize marijuana.
But I would guess that most voters (>70%, and I have no data to back that up) usually vote a straight ticket for one party.
More like 90%.