When you know you take voting seriously
When you're the 22nd (
hr_macgirl) and 23rd (me) people to vote in your precinct, at 1830. (Polls closed at 2000.)
Special election to fill a vacant seat; the only actual race was in the Democratic primary, and so there was only one candidate on the ballot (plus the write-in line).
It was amusing to see how happy the poll workers were to see us, though.
Special election to fill a vacant seat; the only actual race was in the Democratic primary, and so there was only one candidate on the ballot (plus the write-in line).
It was amusing to see how happy the poll workers were to see us, though.
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Why yes, I am cynical...
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But I wanted to keep my record of not missing a single election, special election or primary in the City... because there's only a very tiny number of voters who can claim such on the rolls who have made every single one for the past 10 years.
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Of course, my precinct only has about 400 people in it. Yours may be bigger.
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*In Virginia, you don't register for a party and you can vote in either primary, but not both. In this case, there was not only not a Democratic primary, there won't be a Democratic candidate, so whoever won the Republican primary would be the sheriff. Fortunately, most people agreed with me and the guy I voted for won with 61%. The scary part was that the guy who wanted to make the sheriff's office into illegal immigration deportation central got 18%.
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You can be registered in a party, in which case you can only vote in that party's primary. A party must meet certain criteria (a certain percentage of the vote for a statewide office, or a minimum number of registered voters choosing that party). If it doesn't, it's a "political designation". The list of both is online.
At the moment, there are four parties: Republican, Democratic, Green-Rainbow, and Working Families. (The last had a candidate for Auditor who made the threshold.) In past years, the Libertarian Party has managed to get enough of a statewide run together to be a major party, but not in 2006.
If you're not in a party, you're considered Unenrolled, which is what anywhere else would call Independent, but here we have a designation for the "American Independent Party". (With a whopping 184 members.) There are also designations for the Green Party and Rainbow Coalition, even though they've been running candidates on a joint ticket as Green-Rainbow.
I think my favorite designation name is Timesizing Not Downsizing.
If you're an Unenrolled voter you can vote in any party's primary. If you vote in a Presidential primary, you are automatically enrolled in that party, but can re-unenroll immediately thereafter; they'll even give you a postcard to mail in to make it easier. Other primaries don't auto-enroll you.
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