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Vote Smart

November 2, 2010 by · Comments Off on Vote Smart 

Vote Smart, Project Vote Smart, CNN and prominent national leaders of both parties have completed the 2010 National political courage test to measure the bravado of each candidate for Congress, tenacity and desire to avoid public scrutiny.
After being aggressively approached by citizens and the national media by pressing the candidates on critical issues, a record 64 per cent of the candidates have stood in the square jaw, the steely-eyed silence. The other 36 percent ran into the arms of their persecutors, pleading for coverage because they told the voters what they really thought.

The test of courage has been conducted every election year since 1992, when a large number of candidates, the weak sentiment of freedom, unwisely ceded their positions on the question after question at the request of voters and promoters test.

This year (after clobbering each candidate questions on employment, foreign policy, economics, education, environment, immigration and other issues facing the nation) Courage organizers tests showed that this crop of candidates set a new standard for the kind of tenacity and duplicity that advances the nation to its current level of civility, reason and responsibility.

Half a century ago, no candidate has been brave enough or smart enough to avoid answering questions on key issues when facing the public and the mainstream media. Then, the candidates simply lacked the strength of character necessary to turn back when confronted by principle.

Today, candidates from both major parties in March to the blocking step behind their armies of consultants paving the way to victory. It’s not just this culture of rushing candidates who show their courage, it is too big parties: The two sides held their battalions so successfully that they can easily overwhelm the public and the media with nothing more than a bucket full of baloney, saving their most powerful weapons in a disinterested effort to campaign on behalf of their opponents – clearly delineate their opposing positions on all issues to their personal habits.

Every candidate for election to lower the bar and now we are all fighting in the mud. This domination successful citizen is a remarkable achievement, especially when used in abundance, and accurate information is relevant to them. For test results and facts about the candidates you will vote on: www.votesmart.org

Election Day 2010

November 2, 2010 by · Comments Off on Election Day 2010 

Election Day 2010, (AP) – The fate of the Democratic Congress has been put before voters Tuesday in the midterm elections that attracted the Americans from polling stations before dawn, some clamoring for change, the widening of other their positions against the resurgent Republicans. Captures expectations on both sides that the order was for a political makeover in these anxious times. Vote

In the middle-class suburb of Cleveland, Parma Heights, Ohio, Fred Peck, 48, explained his vote for the Republicans – and by extension against the agenda of President Barack Obama – by pointing to an increase of 20 percent in its health care premiums and the declining value its pension fund. “I do not see anything changing for the better,” said Peck, who works in the maintenance of the campus.

Near Miami Coconut Grove liberal, Professor Steve Wise, 28, voted for Charlie Crist independent for the Senate and Democrats for other offices. Mostly, he welcomed the end of a national campaign so often toxic in tone. “I just want this day is over,” he said. “Because it’s too -. Political ads, newscasts, too many talking heads, I just want to move on and put the country back.”

In Pelham, New York, Raymond Garofano, 66, who works in packaging for Revlon, voted a straight ticket Democratic and that Obama has “done an adequate job. Nobody is perfect.”

Republicans blithely forecast that they would win the House and inaugurate a new era of shared governance, two years after the Democratic victory sealed the presidency, the House and Senate and began to reshape the agenda in a time of serious recession and war. Democrats did not seriously dispute the expectations that they would lose the House this time, even during the campaign through the final hours to stem losses.

“This will be a great day,” Republican House Leader John Boehner, capable of becoming pregnant, if the GOP won the House, said after voting at a church near his West Chester, Ohio, suburban home. He said that for those who think the government spends too much and too Bailout ‘is their opportunity to be heard. ”

Democrats tend to be fortified farm, with an operation praised by the party, organizers of Obama and the unions to get supporters to the polls on Election Day. This time they face a ground game steeped in the tea party, less brilliant than the other side, but full of energy.

The elections are a test mid-term prime time for the coalition soft knit and largely leaderless, incredible force two years ago. Tea party supporters rocked the Republican establishment in the primaries, starting with several veteran lawmakers and the installation of more than 70 candidates; nearly three dozen of them are in competitive races Tuesday.

If successful, the conservative movement could come to Washington as a firewall against expansive federal spending, liberalization of immigration and more, as well as an additional threat to the law on health care historical Republicans hope to somehow get ahead.

The Democrats have had to struggle against the apathy of their supporters and many people who are motivated to vote on Tuesday seemed lukewarm on Obama as they voted for his party.

“I think he’s OK, I would not say great, I would not say horrible,” said Heather Walczuk, 26, a social worker in Manhattan. She moved to Virginia a few years ago and used to vote Republican, but has changed. She said that her mother has recently joined the tea party. “I do not think it fully, truly, knows exactly what is involved or what they stand for,” she said.

At a forum in Windsor Heights, a suburb west of Des Moines, Iowa, several voters said it might be a good thing to have Democrats and Republicans sharing power, and Obama meet braked.

“I voted mostly Republican,” said Jodi Albert, 47, an insurance company worker. “I think some of his policies are a little too social. We need him to stop ”

Travis Kelly, 46, housewife, said of his vote: “I mixed a little while, I do not like it when they talk about increasing the government I guess I wanted to send a signal .. “.

Boehner on Monday pledged to hold weekly votes to cut federal spending, make jobs a top priority GOP and fight to repeal the law on health. Former President Bill Clinton, campaigning for the Democrats as if his own future were on the line, confused late at night in New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky and Florida.

Republicans need 40 more seats to win the House, a goal that polls have indicated that they could reach. Races over 100 of the 435 seats are competitive.

Republicans need a net gain of 10 to take the Senate, a tougher road that forces them to win every close race. The GOP has also made strong bids to add to their ranks and governors to develop in state legislatures.

Efforts to mobilize voters were held for weeks that more than 14 million Americans voted early.

In Nevada, home hot Senate contest between the Democratic majority leader Harry Reid and tea parties pick Sharron Angle, registered Democrats and Republicans came out early in similar numbers. In Pennsylvania, another battleground, more than half the voters were Republicans at the beginning, at last count.

Some races might go days or more without winning, thanks to the multitude of competitions planned nearby – in Colorado, Nevada, Illinois, West Virginia, Ohio, Alaska and more – and the persistence of voting systems fragile in some places than a decade after the presidential election counting disaster in Florida.

Hundreds of lawyers on both sides are ready to roll. Angry supporters and rags caustic ads by the candidates, now spilling into an Election Day that could lead to complaints of voting irregularities, fraud and collapses to the machine – and hair -trigger legal challenges, marked the campaign.

One of the most unpredictable races took place in Alaska, where Senator Lisa Murkowski, upset in the GOP primary by choosing the tea party, Joe Miller, is trying to win voters by having to write his name on the ballot to vote. Democrats injected cash at the end of the campaign to try to lift their candidate, Scott McAdams, on the other two.

Voters in 37 states electing governors. Among the most competitive: the contest between the Ohio Democratic Governor Ted Strickland and former Representative Republican John Kasich.

Where Am I Registered To Vote

November 2, 2010 by · Comments Off on Where Am I Registered To Vote 

Where Am I Registered To Vote, Voting and polling stations by zip code on Election Day 2010 – The big day for the good of the long-awaited day mid-term elections to Congress of the United States has already come. A large number of voters who ask questions: “Where do I vote?” “Where am I registered to vote?” And “Where do I vote?” Because they want to know their voting rights and offices voting by postal code.

Fortunately, Google helped us find information of voters per polling station their “Where to Vote” link on their homepage. When you go to this link, you will be redirected here and you need to enter your mailing address Complete where you are registered to vote, including city, state and zip code for the location where you are registered to vote. After successfully entering this information, Google returns the result of your polling place, including a link to the location of your polling place and state of guidelines on how to get there. Besides Google

There is also information included in the election results as the website of your state, your voter registration status, and a voter hotline in your state. Google implements the project in conjunction with voting information on the project in which webmasters can embed the widget to vote on their sites to allow voters to election day 2010. Remember that voting hours are hours 30 06:30-19 so be sure to cast your votes in this period.

Whether your candidate is up to the Republican Party or Democrat, be sure to cast your votes on Election Day today and let your voice be heard.

Nc Board Of Elections

November 2, 2010 by · Comments Off on Nc Board Of Elections 

Nc Board Of Elections, The machine manufacturer in North Carolina said touchscreen voting devices can be programmed by default vote for Democrats, as claimed last week by Tom Fetzer, the state Republican Party Chairman.

Adam Carbullido, director of customer service for the company, ES & S, said in a letter to the State Board of Elections that the iVotronic machines used in a few dozen counties in North Carolina “does not capacity or encoding mechanism that would allow the system to default to a specific selection, whether a candidate or party. ”

Fetzer said Thursday that the GOP is the compilation of written statements by voters who said they tried to vote a ballot straight-ticket Republican, only to have their votes counted on a final review screen, being cast for Democrats . He said that the problem seems to occur when the touch screen is not sure about the selection of an elector, after which it is programmed to assign the candidate appearing in the first vote in the race.

Democrats are listed before the Republicans on the ballots electronically and then get the vote, said Fetzer. State election officials, and now ES & S, saying that Fetzer’s claim is simply false.

Carbullido stressed that the voting machines, like all touch screen devices must be calibrated to accurately detect the selection of electors and voters are asked to confirm their choice at the end of the process before the ballots are expressed.

The controversy has prompted the GOP to sue. On Saturday, a federal judge ruled that people who vote using devices similar to ATMs in the election on Tuesday will be asked to read a notice asking them to consider their selections carefully and make sure their selections save correctly.

Who do you blame?

Most voters in North Carolina blame the recession on the government rather than business, according to a new survey.

In a survey conducted for the conservative Civitas Institute, 64 percent of registered voters said they believe the government is responsible for the recession, 22 percent think business is responsible, and 14 percent were unsure .

This represents an increase of 10 points the past two years, when 54 percent blamed the government for the financial crisis.

The poll of 600 likely voters was conducted October 18 to 20 by Tel Opinion Research of Alexandria, Va., and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The spin: “The political atmosphere for those in charge has been toxic for the last year,”said Francis De Luca of Civitas Institute.” These figures are just one more sign that voters who decided to blame “.

Moving at the DMV

The state Division of Motor Vehicles has two new deputy commissioners.

Ronald G. Kaylor Jr. and Johanna H. Reese has been appointed Assistant Commissioners. The nominations were announced last week.

Kaylor, who served as director of the DMV License and Theft Bureau since June 2009, was deputy director of operations for the division of alcohol law enforcement before coming to the DMV. He is a veteran of 23 years of law enforcement.

Since May 2006, Reese served as legislative liaison for the state Department of Transportation. Before that, she was director of legal affairs for the state Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

Kaylor oversee the DMV license and theft and the Office of arbitration hearings and section. Reese oversee Driver, Vehicle Services and Operations sections. They started their jobs this week.

Where Do I Vote

November 2, 2010 by · Comments Off on Where Do I Vote 

Where Do I Vote, (AFP) – Democrats Barack Obama faces a day of reckoning on Tuesday as Americans voted in key elections likely to see Republicans take control of the House of Representatives.

Amid a wave of anger at the ailing economy, Democrats also feared heavy losses in the Senate in two moves that could seriously impair the ability of Obama to continue his reform agenda.

But analysts predict the Democrats cling to a slim majority in the Senate, dividing power in Washington and setting the stage for a war superheated political future of Obama’s reelection bid in 2012.

The president warned Monday that the vote “will have an impact for decades to come” and called on Americans demoralized and suffering during the worst economic crisis in decades, not to abandon his campaign for change.

Polling day began in a cold before dawn at 06:00 (1000 GMT) in eight states, and after moving through four areas of the nation would be time to finish after midnight (0400 GMT Wednesday) in remote areas Alaska and Hawaii.

The last days of campaign heats and increasingly bitter saw a huge effort to get out the vote, especially by Democrats, the White House base supporters flood of emails and tweets on the network of micro- Twitter blogging.

“Today is election day. Help give Pres. Allies Obama for advancing America,” said a text message sent to mobile phones.

Forecasters have predicted the Republicans will seek between 45 and 70 seats in the House, more than the 39 they need to get a majority.

The counting of votes in the most contested races should take days, but experts estimate that there would be little doubt Tuesday night with winners and losers.

Republicans have vowed to overthrow Obama sweeping revision of health care and the signing promised a tightening of the budget and tax cuts they said would reduce the deficit, stimulate growth and create jobs.

Encouraged by the conservative movement Tea Party, Republicans are hoping a new enthusiasm will lead them to victory, but needed to win a series of tight races in states like California, Illinois, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Virginia West.

Kentucky Republican Senate candidate Paul Rand, a favorite Tea Party and the front-runner in the race, said he wanted to see radical changes if elected.

“I will work to try to change the entire government,” Paul told CNN Tuesday.

Government “is broken from top to bottom”, and Republicans and Democrats have shown themselves to “unreliable,” he said.

“What we need to do is balance the budget and I do not think they will strengthen and make it unless we force them to do so by law.”

All 435 seats in the House of Representatives, 37 points in the 100 Senate seats and 37 of the 50 governorates are at stake Tuesday.

Democratic National Committee chairman Tim Kaine kept a brave face on CNN Tuesday.

“The other guys tell me they will take both houses back, we say we will hold both houses,” Kaine told CNN. “We are seeing positive signs in the early voting taking place in states that permit. ”

But Dick Durbin, the second highest-ranking Democrat in the Senate, was more frank in his assessment. “We will lose some ground, I’ll be honest with you,” he told MSNBC.

The control of the House Republicans would counter Obama’s plans to fight against global warming and the revision of U.S. immigration, and to control the committees that could launch probes detrimental in the administration.

Obama, who held a press conference Wednesday after the vote, accused the Republicans would have the power to predators health insurance companies and credit card and financial barons by the repeal of health care and reform of Wall Street in addition to an already full presidential legacy.

The Democrats have been working desperately to deny the Republicans the 10 new Senate seats needed to regain the room, including a tough battle on Obama’s former Senate seat from Illinois.

The list of endangered species included Senate Democrats Majority Leader Harry Reid, locked in a tight race with Republican and Tea Party Preferred Sharron Angle in Nevada.

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