General Election: (30 votes)
George W. Bush - 17
Al Gore - 13
Here are the results from the 2004 election:
General Election: (31 votes)
George W. Bush - 16
John Kerry - 14
Ralph Nader - 1
Let the cries of "we're in trouble" begin in 3... 2... 1...
-Bob
oh no. we’re doomed. /sarc
Unless people have moved out this town, turnout seems to be down.
Well I wouldn’t put it past the Obama campaign to have personally taken care of these voters somehow. They had the money to do it.
We’re all gonna die!
(eventually)
meh, no big deal
21 votes were cast in Dixville Notch, with 19 registered voters.
29 votes were cast in Hart’s Location. How many registered voters are there? 25?
How could a group that voted for Bush twice now vote for BO?
Makes no sense.
No matter what anyone on here wants to say. You have to be delusional if you don’t think any of this matters..
Two small red towns that went:
1996: Dole 31, Clinton 20
2000: Bush 38, Gore 18
2004: Bush 35, Kerry 21
have now gone..
2008: Obama 32, McCain 16
We were relying on hope that the polls were missing the rural vote and oversampling Dems. That this many independents have gone for Obama is depressing.
FMCDH(BITS)
A little farther back Bob Dole won.
Clearly this means that Obama has won and we should just give up.
/sarc
NOOOOOOOOOO!!!!
Hey, the numbers don’t lie
Unemployed or welfare recipients = 17
Working middle class taxpayers = 10
Dopeheads = 2
With its state motto being “Live free or die,” New Hampshire must be suicidal.
Heh, these early results don’t mean anything. We don’t even need New Hampshire since we lost it last time. Instead of caring, I think I shall go hound the one person I know in Philly to make sure to vote tomorrow.
At first blush, New Hampshire, where the majority of the 1.3 million populace resides in rural towns, seems an unlikely place for gays and lesbians to sojourn for a civil union. But in the past few years, an extensive network of accommodations welcoming homosexual travelers has opened in rustic villages and other locales....
Stately and serene. The Notchland Inn, perched majestically in the White Mountain town of Hart's Location (pop. 42), opened in 1991. Innkeepers Les Schoof and Edward Butler, together for 29 years, have led the way in creating the community of gay-owned properties across the state. Their property, a handsome stone building with a cluster of smaller cottages, has specialized in crafting intimate wedding, honeymoon or romance escapes, mostly for heterosexual couples. For ceremonies, they have brought in kilted bagpipers, hired vintage cars and filled rooms with candles and white roses. With the new civil union statute, the inn is preparing to offer the same kind of storybook occasions for gay couples. As a justice of the peace, Butler will perform the services.
Obama’s campaign has likely cajoled these people.