Good Idea, thanks for reminder
I’m glad I don’t have to. On the busiest election day I ride my bike about a quarter mile to the local elementary school, walk right in and show my card and ID, and vote. In and out in 10 minutes.
Hey, you do good work by the way, I like your stuff.
I hope you feel better soon.
They’re often also ordered by democrats that are dead.
From one grey creakster to another: I had the same epiphany a month ago, although I lacked the public-spiritedness to suggest it to others, as you did.
In 1980 I was a registered voter in Maine, but living with my wife in Michigan while she was in graduate school.
I remember driving to the Pontiac, MI town hall to have my Maine absentee ballot notarized.
Some Californian with bad hair was running as I recall.
Do it. If you die between now and election day, you could end up voting for Hillary
I understand where you are coming from Swamp.... When you are feeling so bad but still have enough spark to want to get that one last vote in.
Hope you get to feeling better FRiend.
For FL voters...if you decide to live vote either early or election day, please take the absentee ballot with you. They are not supposed to let you vote if you don’t. Also please make sure that you see them destroy it.
Been there, done that and voted............Go Trump!
Did it and mailed them yesterday for GA...I can’t count on my husband feeling well enough to make it to the polls so figured that would be the safest thing to do....
You don't want to "throw away your vote" on someone who has since exited the race.
I’ve voted absentee for the last ten or more years. It’s a lot more convenient. But it makes me ashamed when I get to the names on the back, judges, etc. I don’t keep up on those and should plus they don’t have to put an R or D by them.
I voted absentee once. It was the general election in 2000 (FL). I knew I was going overseas around the time of the election, so I wanted to make sure my vote counted.
Stayed up until around 3am election night. Screw it, I’d find out in the morning.
Left for the UK the next afternoon. I’d know when I got there, I’m sure the local papers will have coverage.
I ended up following the election in the English versions of newspapers in five different countries. You’d think there were tanks in the streets the way they described it.