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FourScore

(9,704 posts)
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 01:18 AM Nov 2012

I voted Friday, and I'm still angry

Sun Nov 04, 2012 at 11:50 AM PST
I voted Friday, and I'm still angry
by yulooloo

At 2:30 or so on Friday afternoon, my partner said to me, "Let's get the kid in the car and go vote."

Of course, when you have a 19-month-old, nothing — and I mean nothing — happens in a simple, linear fashion. So by the time we got out the door, it was 4:18. I started doing the math in my head: 15 miles from Petaluma to Santa Rosa; not quite rush hour traffic, so . . . taking the back roads instead of the freeway, with a little luck we could just make it to the Registrar of Voters, which closed at 5, in time...

...We pulled up to the Sonoma County Registrar of Voters building in Santa Rosa at 4:49 pm, and pulled into a 30-minute parking spot right in front of the entrance. I got the kid's socks and shoes back onto her feet and lifted her out of the car seat, and we went inside.

No lines. No waiting. No liars or thugs or "concerned citizens" outside trying to turn us away or challenge our right to be there. We sat in comfy chairs and filled out our ballots while my daughter scribbled on a voter registration card and basked in the attention of both the county employees and our fellow voters, who made much of the Wonder Woman costume she had insisted on wearing, and her gorgeous hazel-and-green eyes. I even borrowed an eraser to correct a bubble I'd filled in by mistake. We did have one problem: my partner had forgotten her sample ballot, so she had to fill out an absentee ballot request card by hand, which took nearly a full minute. Can you imagine.

We thanked the elections department staff and left, got back in the car, and were sitting down to dinner in a nearby restaurant by 5:30.

Like many Kossacks, my partner and I are huge civics geeks. Voting gives us a rush of elation and pride; we've both been known to get choked up after handing in our ballots. And this time was no different, except it was. Underlying our nerdy euphoria was something new — a furious, seething rage.

You see, in all my voting life, I've never had to wait longer than 15 minutes, tops. In Brookline, Massachusetts, I simply swung by my polling place on my morning walk to the office. In San Francisco, I walked around the corner — the polling place was closer to our house than the coffee shop, so we would vote and then caffeinate. And in Sonoma County, it's even easier, if that's possible.

So why were we so angry? It's because we both realized all over again that voting should be this easy, this casual, this much fun, for every single American. No matter where they live or what color their district (and do I even need to say, no matter what color their skin?).

We also realized that, up till now, we've been lucky. As a childless, professional couple who have always had the flexibility to show up to work late, leave early, take a long lunch, etc, making it to the polls has never been difficult. But the simple addition of a toddler to our lives has completely changed the game. We suddenly got quite a vivid picture of how a long line, a moved or closed polling place, or a challenge to our registration status could keep us from voting.

I'm furious, knowing that people in Florida are standing in line for 9 hours just to exercise their right to vote. That people in minority neighborhoods across the country have to navigate a minefield of intimidation, misinformation, and dirty tricks, just to be counted. That one of our two major political parties seems to view voter suppression as just another, completely appropriate, arrow in the quiver of their campaign strategy.

I agree wholeheartedly with MSNBC's Chris Hayes: interfering with the right to vote isn't just wrong. It's an obscenity.

I know President Obama is going to be re-elected on Tuesday, and I'm hopeful that we'll expand our seats in the Senate and take back the House. But one thing is certain: we can't let another four years go by without working for election reform. We need a single set of rules nationwide, for every state, every county, every polling place, every voter. And we need it fast.

To those of you who haven't had it as easy as I have, who've had to wait for hours or come back another day with the right documents, or deal with any other Republican nefariousness, I offer my profound respect — and my sheepish apologies for not appreciating nearly enough just how fortunate I've been. And let's just say that election reform has moved up several places on my list of critical issues for activism and advocacy.

4:36 PM PT: Rec list? Seriously? I'm gobsmacked, truly. Thank you all for your stories, your insights, and your recommendations.

Starting Wednesday, let's work together to make voting a sacred thing for every American . . . but first, let's GET. OUT. THE. VOTE!

8:36 PM PT: Watching Rachel Maddow's special Sunday coverage of the Miami-Dade voters who waited until 1 a.m. to vote and had to put up with locked doors, having their cars towed, and more. All I can say is, Florida voters, you embody the very best that we as a people and a nation have to offer: against all odds, we find a way. I'm humbled and inspired by your determination and tenacity — and speechless with gratitude.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/11/04/1155173/-I-voted-Friday-and-I-m-still-angry

17 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Le Taz Hot

(22,271 posts)
4. Lifelong CA resident
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 01:41 AM
Nov 2012

and I have never had to wait to vote. But this is what I don't understand. These problems have been going on for years in Florida and Ohio. Where are the Democrats" Where is the A.G.? Where are the lawsuits? Where is our illustrious Fourth Estate?

appleannie1

(5,072 posts)
7. I live in Pennsylvania and in this state there was a law suit. We never had a problem until
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 02:05 AM
Nov 2012

the governor, House and Senate of this state was taken over by Republicans. You will find that every state where there are problems of this nature is run by Republicans. They seem to think limiting the access to voting is their right.

pnwmom

(109,011 posts)
10. Actually, in Florida this is new. Charlie Crist had extended early voting to 14 days.
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 03:49 AM
Nov 2012

The current governor signed GOP legislation cutting that back to 8 days.

And there are legal actions taking place.

In Ohio, the particular strategies this year are new. And the Dems have been responding with legal action.

appleannie1

(5,072 posts)
6. I am a poll worker in a rural, Republican district. Four couples would be a long line.
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 02:02 AM
Nov 2012

We never have more than 2 poll watchers, 1 from each party. Being a Republican district, I expect no problems, no intimidation and no challenges. I think it is a disgrace that one political party can do what is being done in Democratic areas around this country. To me intentionally suppressing the right of citizens to vote is comparable to treason. It is completely un-American and goes against every principal of this country.

 

ErikJ

(6,335 posts)
8. Move to the 1st WORLD OREGON, I'm voting while I'm watching Chris Matthews! HEEYAH!
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 03:34 AM
Nov 2012

I just drop it by the library tomorrow. Oregon has almost a 90% voter participation rate vs 50% national.
The rest of the states remind me of those pics from Iraq where they dip their thumbs in ink.

pnwmom

(109,011 posts)
11. Thanks to Oregon's example, we have vote-by-mail now in Washington, too.
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 03:51 AM
Nov 2012

And more than 80% participation rate.

KILL THE WISE ONE

(1,120 posts)
17. Join us on the Left Coast!
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 04:39 AM
Nov 2012

I agree - Vote by mail is great !! I got a ballot 2 weeks ago, filled it out when I felt like it.
I mailed it a week ago. If you have anything less then this, You need to demand change.

xxqqqzme

(14,887 posts)
9. You are so right!
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 03:46 AM
Nov 2012

I'm in behind the orange curtain. Except for the Anaheim mayor hiring security guards, pretending to be INS to scare Latino voters a few years ago, I have never encountered problems or an extended line wait to vote. I have worked the polls many times and while we did have a rush in the morning and after folks got off work, in '08, we got them in an out as fast as possible. But then CA doesn't have ID laws. But we also have a damn fine Democratic Secretary of State. Even had a Democratic Secretary of State when steroid boy was governor.

I'm with you! When I see the lines and the prevention, suppression and intimidation, I just do not get it. One would think, after 2000, Florida would want to avoid the reputation as obstructor of open elections.

LeftyMom

(49,212 posts)
14. I was just making this point to somebody else earlier. I'm in CA, I've been a poll worker.
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 04:07 AM
Nov 2012

The longest line I've ever seen in a polling place was perhaps ten minutes long, and that was a brief rush as people were stopping in to vote on their way home from work. We don't have early voting here (except absentee) but we do have well run polling places that are very close together and not expected to serve too many people.

BTW, one thing that we do right here is that our polling workers know that IT IS NOT THEIR PLACE TO KEEP ANYONE FROM VOTING. Worst case scenario if somebody isn't on their register they should have them vote a provisional ballot and county elections will sort it out from there. This idea that sitting through a two hour powerpoint lecture qualifies anyone to deny a voter their rights is ridiculous and horrifying.

Iwillnevergiveup

(9,298 posts)
15. K&R for the OP
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 04:12 AM
Nov 2012

You know, when we're born, we get a birth certificate, and many, many parents get S.S. numbers for their babies right away, too. Why not a damn voter registration card, too that is good nation-wide and that can be used throughout a lifetime?

-LOKI -BAD FOR YA

(308 posts)
16. will not happen,makes too much sense,and with photo
Mon Nov 5, 2012, 04:34 AM
Nov 2012

the rethugs would cry this is the start of FEMA Concentration and Internment Camps.keep up the good ideas,maybe a Constitutional amendment.

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