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Election 2008

Top 5 Things That Might Keep You From Voting

By Allison H. Fine, Huffington Post. Posted October 8, 2008.


Hurry up and register -- it might already be too late in your state.
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Enormous efforts have been made by campaigns and public interest groups to register people to vote on November 4th. According to the Election Assistance Commission more than 2 million poll workers will be working at over 200,000 polling places this election. Unfortunately, what these new voters don't know is that just registering to vote may not ensure that they are able to vote on Election Day or that their vote will be counted. Here are the top 5 ways that voters will be disenfranchised before and on Election Day.



1. Twenty-seven states close their voter registration the first week of October; another 12 will follow shortly thereafter. Too many states continue to cut off registration just as most people are beginning to tune into the election. Election Day Registration (EDR) in nine states (Maine, Wisconsin, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Iowa, North Carolina) has demonstrated that it is an efficient and problem-free way for 10-12% more citizens to participate on Election Day.
2. The Social Security Administration is shutting down its database, the one needed to verify registrations for people without state-issued IDS for three days in mid-October. This "routine maintenance" putting in jeopardy the ability of forty-one, slow moving states to verify millions of new registrants in time for Election Day for voters without state-issued IDs. (Here is a letter sent by the National Association of Secretaries of State asking the SSAS to move the maintenance until after November.) Millions of people may have properly filled out their registration forms but not make it onto the roles if this maintenance continues as scheduled.
3. Voter Purge, a report released from the Brennan Center for Justice this week reveals that, "election officials across the country are routinely striking millions of voters from the rolls through a process that is shrouded in secrecy, prone to error, and vulnerable to manipulation." Millions of names will be struck from voter registration roles in advance of the November 4th election - and your name is struck in error you won't know until you show up at the polls - and it's too late to change it.
4. As I have written before, the new machines are no better than the old machines which were much worse than hand ballots. During the primary season, municipalities were testing optical scan machines, and many failed. Others have been furiously buying new machines that won't be tested before November 4th. The new machines are no better than the old machines which were much worse than hand ballots. How many times will we hear on election night that votes have been cast and lost or just plain lost? Moreover, how many elections are we going to keep hearing this?
5. You remember those pictures form 2004 and 2006 of voters waiting for hours to cast their ballots - up to 12 hours in some cases in the rain and cold. Our voting system is a mechanical engineer's nightmare. The biggest bottleneck in the process of voting is checking in to ensure that voters are registered to vote - this is a human interaction that is slow and tedious. It's the same reason that the lines at Starbucks are so long. I spoke to a person in the registrar's office in Fairfax County, VA who told me that they had increased the number of recruited poll workers from 2,600 in 2004 to 3,100 this year, with more to come by the deadline on Monday. Monday coincides with the voter registration deadline in Virginia which has already seen an almost 6% increase in voter registration statement from January -September 15th. But here's the real problem: There is no way to know until Election Day if they will a) show up, b) been adequately trained for the job and c) are enough of them to account for the expected surge in voting in critical voting areas like Cuyahoga County, OH, Palm Beach County, FL.



So register to vote -- and then cross your fingers that you your vote will be cast and counted on Election Day -- in some states your chances aren't so good.

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Allison Fine is the author of Momentum: Igniting Social Change in the Connected Age.

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Liz
Posted by: Modine on Oct 8, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's another reason: posted in Huffpost yesterday -
Thousands of voters in 37 states may be turned away from the polls because of misinformation on online Web sites, which follow the directions on the United States Election Commission Web site.
Barack Obama’s and John McCain’s Web sites, as well as Rock the Vote, help users fill out forms which can be printed out and mailed.
They are conveniently addressed to the potential voter’s secretary of state, or an equivalent state office. All the potential voter has to do is add a stamp and mail it off.
Problem is, for at least 37 states, it’s the wrong address.
In those states, potential voters are required to send their forms to different locations, usually county registrars.
On the United States Election Commission Web site, http://www.eac.gov/voter/Register%20to%20Vote, each state is listed on a grid, with registration deadlines and a column headed “where to send registration forms.” That column lists gives the specific address of each state’s secretary of state or its equivalent.
But that does not match the directions given by 37 of those states.
States affected include Alabama Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and, West Virginia.
Registration has already ended in Alaska, Arizona, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah ( except for walk-ns), Virginia and Washington.
Nevada, Utah and Washington have an extended period for walk-in registrants.
In Illinois and New Mexico , registration ends today, Oct. 7 and in Missouri it ends Wednesday, Oct. 8.
In Louisiana, the Secretary of State’s Web site and literature specifically warns against sending the forms there, in underlined letters. It directs that they be sent to the parish (county) registrar.
A Louisiana Secretary of State employee said the forms addressed there would be forwarded to the proper registrar, but there was no guarantee they would get there in time to be processed for the presidential election.
But Obama campaign representatives in Louisiana, who realized the error this week, said they planned to contact the office, hoping to assure that incorrectly addressed forms were released to the proper registrar's offices in time.
Online registrants are assumed to be primarily young, first-time voters, a group that heavily favors Obama.


Liz Scott Monaghan
985-796-5878

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Why Vote?
Posted by: Ky Lake Dave on Oct 8, 2008 9:01 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has it in the bag. Since it is going to be a landslide, your vote will probably not be needed so kick back smoke a bowl and relax on Nov 5th. Why screw around with finding the polls and waiting hours in line when Obama is gonna win if you vote or not. He is a shoe in.

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» RE: Why Vote? Posted by: maestra
» RE: Why Vote? Posted by: lil ole me
» RE: Why Vote? Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: Why Vote? Posted by: tenn4
Obama has it in the bag?
Posted by: jv66 on Oct 8, 2008 4:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nice...lets get McCain elected by not voting...brilliant...idiot

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There are other parties with candidates for president
Posted by: Maxemum on Oct 8, 2008 4:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reps and dems have done nothing for this country and they stack the deck so the other parties cannot participate in the debates or get their words out.

If we really want change, it's time to start thinking about how we can effect change.

http://www.lp.org/

http://gp.org/index.php

http://www.constitutionparty.com/

http://www.newamericanindependent.com/

http://bostontea.us/

http://www.pslweb.org/site/PageServer

http://www.prohibition.org/

http://reformpa.web.aplus.net/

http://www.sp-usa.org/

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Obama Muslim Outreach Coordinator Under Fire for Meeting With Extremists
Posted by: Ky Lake Dave on Oct 10, 2008 2:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Barak Obama's Muslim outreach adviser is under fire for meeting with Islamic groups with extremist views, just months after her predecessor resigned for links to a radical cleric.
Friday, October 10, 2008
Barack Obama's newly appointed Muslim outreach adviser is coming under fire for meeting with Islamic groups with extremist views, just two months after her predecessor resigned over links to a radical cleric.
Minha Husaini met with members of several Islamic organizations in Virginia on September 15 -- including some that terrorism experts say have ties to Hamas and the radical Muslim Brotherhood.
Among the attendees were senior members of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which was listed by federal prosecutors as an unindicted co-conspirator in a terror-related trial.
Several people connected to CAIR have been convicted of felonies -- including on terrorism-related charges.
CAIR bills itself as the nation's largest Muslim civil-rights advocacy group. As recently as last year, it advised the Transportation Security Administration on sensitivity training regarding Muslim air travelers. Nihad Awad, a CAIR co-founder and executive director, met with President Bush in the aftermath of 9/11.
But critics say CAIR has a long history of masquerading as a moderate Islamic group.
"These groups, even if they themselves are not active terrorist organizations, do subscribe to large amounts of the ideology that fuels the terrorism that we are being confronted with," said Andrew McCarthy, former Assistant U.S. Attorney.
CAIR did not return repeated calls for comment.
Awad, who was at the September meeting with Husaini, recently attended a dinner with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Also present at the Sept. 15 meeting was Mahdi Bray, who has publicly announced his support for the terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah. Bray, the executive director of the Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation, raised his fist in the air during a rally in Washington in October 2000 to demonstrate his support for the terror groups.
Bray refused to comment on the recent gathering. "It was a closed meeting," he told FOX News.
Johari Abdul Malik, imam of the Dar Al-Hijrah Mosque in Falls Church, Va., also participated in the meeting. During a conference in Chicago in 2001, he told attendees, "You can blow up bridges, but you cannot kill people who are innocent on their way to work." In November 2004 he told followers, "You will see Islam move from being the second largest religion in America -- to being the first religion in America."
Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said the campaign would not have sent a representative to the meeting had it known the list of participants.
"This meeting was not organized by the campaign -- our outreach staff attends many meetings in the course of each day and they accepted an invitation from community leaders to attend," LaBolt told FOX News in a written statement.
The Obama campaign's previous Muslim outreach advisor, Mazen Asbahi -- who stepped down in August following reports he was linked to a radical imam -- also attended the meeting.
In a brief telephone conversation, Asbahi refused to discuss why he was at the meeting or whom he was representing.
According to LaBolt, "[Asbahi] is not an employee of the campaign and does not speak on behalf of the campaign."

This would keep me from voting OBAMA!

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