BobTheCoward
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2010
- Messages
- 22,789
Oh dear... you did not read the link did you? No you didn't.
You really just asked why they would do something they actually did?
Remarkable.
So? What's wrong with this?
Oh dear... you did not read the link did you? No you didn't.
You really just asked why they would do something they actually did?
Remarkable.
So? What's wrong with this?
Thanks. I think (but am happy to be corrected) that here the position of polling stations is determined by an independent body, so the incumbent party can't close stations in areas they think it would be helpful to do so.There's no set limit. States have different rules and often it can be up to the individual locality. In Philadelphia, we are broken into 66 wards, each ward is broken up into between 10 and 50 divisions. Each division has its own polling "place". One physical polling location can host more than one division, but will have separate machines for each division.
Philadelphia has roughly 1,000,000 registered voters. I did some back of the napkin calculations on some very conservative numbers and came to about 450 people per division (and of course not all of them will vote). But I think my numbers were way too conservative based on personal experience.
In other areas of the country there are thousands of people per location. It's, frankly, nuts. The idea that people have to stand in line for HOURS is just mind boggling.
Collusion between the so-called unbiased media and one of the main subjects of their reporting?
wow.
Thanks. I think (but am happy to be corrected) that here the position of polling stations is determined by an independent body, so the incumbent party can't close stations in areas they think it would be helpful to do so.
Yeah, it's weird to me too. When I vote, I never have to wait more than a couple minutes in line. But I usually get home from work a little earlier than most people so I often vote in a lull as everyone is commuting home - and in Philadelphia, most people live within a short walk to their polling location. My polling place is two blocks away.
At least it's not hours of waiting like some places. It astounds and angers me that it happens, but it does.
ETA: Friends just posted a picture of our polling station, there's at least 50 people in line. Dunno how quickly it's moving. Other reports from random friends in the city indicate that lines are longer than in 2012 and 2008.
didn't drive a car in 35 years
accomplished nothing except murdering 4 diplomats in Benghazi.
I did what Bernie Sanders says people should do. You know, vote for Ben Ghazi's murderer.https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/54085#efmAFrAV9
Clinton: out of touch, cronyistic, didn't drive a car in 35 years, flew all over the world but accomplished nothing except murdering 4 diplomats in Benghazi.
Write in Bernie Sanders!
Also the boundaries commission is independent so as to avoid the kind of Gerrymandering which has made the House of Representatives more or less impermeable to the will of the people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerrymandering_in_the_United_States
Collusion between the so-called unbiased media and one of the main subjects of their reporting?
wow.
Sean Spicer, the Republican National Committee’s communications director, suggested on Monday that some networks do also reach out to the party to ask for questions ahead of interviews.
“Sometimes, yeah. It depends,” Spicer told “Kilmeade and Friends” host Brian Kilmeade, when asked if networks ever pepper him for questions to ask during interviews.
“There will be times where a host will reach out and say ‘I’m doing an interview with so-and-so, is there anything that you guys know of, what are five questions you would ask.'
Normally this is the case. Seems different this year. I see a few people in different parts of the city posting about waiting in line for 40+ minutes. And the last I heard the line for my polling location was about 3 blocks long. Nobody is complaining about the wait though, they all seem excited so far.I have fond memories of living and voting in Pennsylvania. I lived on the same block as my polling place, so would walk down, walk right in, and vote on election day with never a bit of a wait.
If Clinton's out of touch, what does that say about Trump?
Trump has made it quite clear that he touches all kinds of things regardless of if they want to be touched.
Normally this is the case. Seems different this year. I see a few people in different parts of the city posting about waiting in line for 40+ minutes. And the last I heard the line for my polling location was about 3 blocks long. Nobody is complaining about the wait though, they all seem excited so far.
Normally this is the case. Seems different this year. I see a few people in different parts of the city posting about waiting in line for 40+ minutes. And the last I heard the line for my polling location was about 3 blocks long. Nobody is complaining about the wait though, they all seem excited so far.
I think in 30 or so years of voting the longest I've ever waited in line to vote was 10 minutes - maybe Americans should consider setting up more polling stations if your waits are that long.
I think in 30 or so years of voting the longest I've ever waited in line to vote was 10 minutes - maybe Americans should consider setting up more polling stations if your waits are that long.
I think in 30 or so years of voting the longest I've ever waited in line to vote was 10 minutes - maybe Americans should consider setting up more polling stations if your waits are that long.
I think that's the GOP's point, to get long lines in areas where there's a large minority vote and so suppress turnout. In GOP voting areas there will be proportionally far more polling stations with longer opening hours, justified by *reasons*