It surprises me that the Tea Party did not have much effect on the Senate or Governor seats. The House went 3/4 Democrat which was ok but not great either. Just a surprise to a used to be reliable red state.
“It surprises me that the Tea Party did not have much effect on the Senate or Governor seats. The House went 3/4 Democrat which was ok but not great either. Just a surprise to a used to be reliable red state.”
I believe the “election theft” machine in Colorado has been perfected by the Progressives in our state.
Ken Buck was polling five percent ahead the week of the election.
It is the Provisional ballots that are problematic in Colorado. When you have thousands of citizens deciding at the last minute, “hey, I want to participate in this thing called politics” and then they drop off ballots after the election, mostly for dem candidates, something stinks....
I would like to see much greater participation by tea party members in the poll watching, vote tallying, and overview of the secretary of state side of politics in Colorado. I would also challenge the Colorado State Legislature to create rules that would make it impossible for voter fraud to take place.
This could include:
1. Only allow voting on the day of the election, with a “purple finger” type of proof that only one vote has been cast.
2. No Provisional ballots, if you are too lazy to register to vote in a timely way before the election, you lose the ability to participate.
If these two principles were set in place, no one could steal an election.
Jenny
I was thinking the same things about the TEA Party not doing well in Colorado. I hope that Colorado doesn’t become a “blue state”, like Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Illinois, Vermont, Connecticut, California, Oregon, Maryland, Delaware, and Washington state.