Yosh wrote:Interestingly, the gun control camp wildly outspent their opponents. I rather expected a headline screaming that the opposite was true.
geonuc wrote:We're doomed anyway. Democrats can't compete with Republicans in the sleazy politics game. Didn't used to be that way.
brite wrote:The gun lobby also managed to quash all mail in voting, which is how most Coloradans vote. They also managed to get the voting times greatly reduced (Thursday, Friday and Monday 7-5, Saturday 7-5 and Tuesday 7-7 instead of 10 days of voting with polls open 12 hours a day)... In other words... make it as difficult as possible for the other guys to get their people out there.
Not to mention it's an off off year...
Now, people... 2014 is an "off" year election -- you don't like what your Congress Critter is doing and he/she is up for re-election?? VOTE! Quit your damned whining and exercise your Constitutional right and vote!
brite wrote:The gun lobby also managed to quash all mail in voting, which is how most Coloradans vote. They also managed to get the voting times greatly reduced (Thursday, Friday and Monday 7-5, Saturday 7-5 and Tuesday 7-7 instead of 10 days of voting with polls open 12 hours a day)... In other words... make it as difficult as possible for the other guys to get their people out there.
Not to mention it's an off off year...
Now, people... 2014 is an "off" year election -- you don't like what your Congress Critter is doing and he/she is up for re-election?? VOTE! Quit your damned whining and exercise your Constitutional right and vote!
geonuc wrote:Restrictions on access to the polls, be it shorter time, fewer hours, ID requirements, fewer locations, clearly affect the less well off disproportionately. They might be working two jobs, working jobs that don't allow time off to vote, they might not have a car, etc. And the less well off tend to vote Democratic.
No... the average voter is disadvantaged, regardless of what side of the issue he comes in on. I heard reports that there was a less than 10% turn out... Because Coloradans are used to voting by mail, having more hours to vote, and it, in general, being easier to vote.Yosh wrote:geonuc wrote:Restrictions on access to the polls, be it shorter time, fewer hours, ID requirements, fewer locations, clearly affect the less well off disproportionately. They might be working two jobs, working jobs that don't allow time off to vote, they might not have a car, etc. And the less well off tend to vote Democratic.
I agree. Except the usual caricature of the average gun-owner is a lower class, blue-collar, redneck. So the "pro gun" camp would be the one most at a disadvantage, neh?
brite wrote:No... the average voter is disadvantaged, regardless of what side of the issue he comes in on. I heard reports that there was a less than 10% turn out... Because Coloradans are used to voting by mail, having more hours to vote, and it, in general, being easier to vote.Yosh wrote:geonuc wrote:Restrictions on access to the polls, be it shorter time, fewer hours, ID requirements, fewer locations, clearly affect the less well off disproportionately. They might be working two jobs, working jobs that don't allow time off to vote, they might not have a car, etc. And the less well off tend to vote Democratic.
I agree. Except the usual caricature of the average gun-owner is a lower class, blue-collar, redneck. So the "pro gun" camp would be the one most at a disadvantage, neh?
But the real question becomes....
They voted these people in last year.... and because a few people didn't like how they voted on one bill... should that have forced a recall? Is that how we are now going to govern ourselves?
The recalls in Wisconsin were about bigger issues than just one bill... and reached all the way to the governors office (and failed... due, again, to lack of voter turn out)..
So the message that we are giving out here is... sure... run for office.... but vote the way the lobbyists want you to vote, or they will force a recall on you....
brite wrote:But the real question becomes....
They voted these people in last year.... and because a few people didn't like how they voted on one bill... should that have forced a recall? Is that how we are now going to govern ourselves?
The recalls in Wisconsin were about bigger issues than just one bill... and reached all the way to the governors office (and failed... due, again, to lack of voter turn out)..
So the message that we are giving out here is... sure... run for office.... but vote the way the lobbyists want you to vote, or they will force a recall on you....
brite wrote:Yosh.... In New York State... An employer MUST give an employee time off to vote(up to 4hours), polls are open from 6am -9pm on Election Day... In the 2012 election less than 43% of eligible voters turned out to vote, in New York. When we were kids we used to get the day off from school.
The problem with the recall elections (any of them) is not necessarily the money spent (though that is a factor), but low voter turn out, but manipulation of the local election laws. If you are used to getting the time off to vote, and are told that if you take that time, you will be fired, and the polls are closed before and after work, how are you going to try to vote on the weekend if there is weekend polling? If you are used to mailing in your vote, and they take that option away from you, and leave only the physical polls as an option, how hard are you going to work to vote?
Part of the issue, as I see it, is that we have too many election laws. Why not make Election Day a federal holiday, make the polls open from 6-9on that day and the day before and after. Give everyone who is eligible a national voter id, and when young people register for the armed services, they get their voter id. We "oldsters" can be grandfathered in....
Crap.... I think I just. Found my policy paper for polisci.... LOL
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests