2
0

Due to the Storm Voting in the North Eastern states will be postponed.


 invite response                
2012 Oct 30, 3:05am   3,408 views  13 comments

by Tenpoundbass   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

Voting for districts in the following States have been postponed until November 7th. VT., Mass., R.I., Conn., Del., Md., D.C., NY and Maine, as the clean up effort will take at least a week to prepare the polling stations and repair the damage caused by Hurricane Sandy. Officials are advising everyone to stay home, don't Google for confirmation, turn off your radios and stay uninformed.
Bus service will canvassing neighborhoods, to shuttle voters to the polls on the new day.
There will no doubt be some Republican supporters, trying to get you out to the polls on Tuesday, one day early, how ever the polls will be closed. It is best you stay home and wait for the Community Voting buses to collect you on Wednesday.
One official was quoted saying, "We are so close now, let's not let the GOP propaganda machine trip us up now. Fox news will doubt be reporting Tuesday as the official election day, but they are just trying to psyche the voters out in that region."

The storm took it's Toll on all of our precincts, schools may even be out as long as a week.

#politics

Comments 1 - 13 of 13        Search these comments

1   Shaman   2012 Oct 30, 5:58am  

Very sneaky!

2   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 30, 6:05am  

Of course this was tongue and cheek and not true at all.
But I would like to ask Patneters how do you think the storm will effect voter turn out, in those states that every election map has already colored blue?

3   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 30, 6:13am  

How will this effect electronic voting in Manhattan?
If this is true it looks like Red Hook and Rochester will be claiming NY as a Red state a week from now.

Some 7.5 million customers remain without power as of Tuesday morning, according to CNN estimates.

In Manhattan, a massive explosion at a ConEdison plant along the East River left a big chuck of the island in the dark.

Throughout the region, downed trees and flooding have taken out power lines that serve millions. Utilities say it could take 7 to 10 days to repair the damage, even with extra crews that have been brought in from other parts of the country.

http://money.cnn.com/2012/10/30/news/economy/hurricane-sandy-power-duplicate-2/index.html

4   edvard2   2012 Oct 30, 6:42am  

Another question will be on what difference could be had given the President has the advantage of being in office during a major natural disaster. If he handles it well then that could be advantageous. If Romney wins due to low voter turnout due to a natural disaster then that would be a very sad thing.

5   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 30, 6:52am  

Yeah but you gotta admit, the irony of electronic voting machines biting the very people championed it, in the ass.

Romney has it in the bag anyway. This would just give those Republicans in upstate a nice reprieve from being called a blue state. For them this will be a good thing.

6   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 30, 6:55am  

edvard2 says

If he handles it well then that could be advantageous.

The last president that handled it well was H.W. Bush. He didn't stand in the way of free enterprise and the economy flourished not only from Andrew but from all of the Midwest flooding. There wasn't a factory in America that wasn't working overtime by time Clinton came in office. Where do you think all the income Clinton was able to raise taxes on came from? Before those disasters America was still crawling along from Reaganomics in a stagnate funk.

7   edvard2   2012 Oct 30, 7:05am  

CaptainShuddup says

The last president that handled it well was H.W. Bush. He didn't stand in the way of free enterprise and the economy flourished not only from Andrew but from all of the Midwest flooding

That's supposed to be a joke... right?

8   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 30, 7:10am  

NO I was there, and have been in every disaster since.
Hurricane Andrew and the flood put the whole nation back to work.
Hungry people weren't bussed off or sent formaldehyde trailers to live and watch from the sidelines.

p.s even though Bush handled it right, it still didn't win him a second term.
Also I don't think Obama can do anything in one week that will make a difference.
The writing is already on the wall. IF anything, lack of voting access for those effected will cost him more than anything else.

9   anonymous   2012 Oct 30, 7:15am  

edvard2 says

Another question will be on what difference could be had given the President has the advantage of being in office during a major natural disaster. If he handles it well then that could be advantageous. If Romney wins due to low voter turnout due to a natural disaster then that would be a very sad thing.

At least you're not politicizing this nat disaster. It would be good if the storm is good for obama, and its bad if its good for romney. Hilarious

I'm wondering how many of the domestic Fukushimas got close scares over the storm and all the flooding. Has the media been reporting on all the events surrounding the nuclear PPs in the area?

10   Shaman   2012 Oct 30, 7:18am  

I was wondering about that too. Displaced New York City dwellers may not be back in time to vote, even if voting machines make it into their regular district v
Poll sites. Will NY go red?

11   edvard2   2012 Oct 30, 7:24am  

CaptainShuddup says

The writing is already on the wall. IF anything, lack of voting access for those effected will cost him more than anything else.

Yes- I agree. Polls show Obama with a solid electoral lead.errc says

I'm wondering how many of the domestic Fukushimas got close scares over the storm and all the flooding. Has the media been reporting on all the events surrounding the nuclear PPs in the area?

From what I'd read all of the local nuclear power plants were equipped to handle conditions worse than what had occurred. Latest I've read was that so far all of the plants handled the storm fine.

12   anonymous   2012 Oct 30, 8:08am  

Do you read any honest news sources that would be capable of reproting any troubles, if there were any, with any of the nuclear facilities? I don't know who is a trustworthy news source here in the states these days,,,

http://abcnews.go.com/m/story?id=17598503

Remember japans domestic media outlets, as fukushima unfolded? "Nothing to worry about here",,,don't want to create panic

13   Tenpoundbass   2012 Oct 31, 1:06am  

http://www.cnn.com/2012/10/31/politics/sandy-voting-election-day/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Storm damage, power outages from Maine to South Carolina raise questions about Election Day voting
Unlikely Congress would extend voting nationwide due to problems in storm-struck states
N.J. Gov. Christie doesn't "give a damn about Election Day" with emergency on his hands
States on the outskirts of Sandy's wrath will fare better on November 6

http://www.cnn.com/2012/10/31/opinion/ghitis-superstorm-voting/index.html

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Frida Ghitis has seen disasters around the world change people's vote
Approval ratings soar or plummet depending on disaster performance, she says
Ghitis: Both political camps are handling the aftermath of Sandy with exact care
Voters must keep in mind all the candidate stood for before disaster happened, she say

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste