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northern Virginia, Fairfax County, 6-12:30 poll shift


Turnout is very high.  We have about 2500 registered in our precinct, which has been trending Dem and went about 60-40 for Kerry.  700 voted prior to today, either absentee or early voting. 

At 6 am the line extended another 100 feet beyond the 100+ feet line inside the elementary school polling place.  An opscan vote tabulator broke down and the line barely moved during the 45 minutes or so it took to get a tech in to fix it.  I was outside more than I was inside during that time and did not see anyone leave the line.  Once the problem was fixed the line moved well and by late AM folks were smiling as they left, pleasantly surprised at how short the wait was at that point. 

By 10 am roughly 1600 votes had been cast, total, about 65% turnout already.  The word from our poll watcher was that we were doing very well with our folks turning out.  Someone speculated we could see 90% turnout.  There is ongoing targeted, well organized activity to try to get as many as possible of the rest of our folks out.

Levels of incivility towards those of us offering sample ballots were low, consisting entirely of semi-obnoxious body language from a minority of Republican voters.  I'd estimate 90% of it came from white men ages 35 and up.

I try to make a point of engaging Republican counterparts when I do this work.  Two years ago, during a lightly trafficked shift, I met a 55-ish Republican attorney from Kansas whose brother lives in the precinct.  He was peddling the anti-evolution line to me.  Very civil, pleasant gentleman.

Two of our counterparts for part of my shift were 18 and 15 year old boys.  Out of curiosity I asked them if they had some serious concern re whether Obama was really patriotic or not.  The 18 year old said no, he didn't buy into that rhetoric.  The 15 year old answered by saying he was not going to answer because his experience has taught him that if he answers truthfully he will be called a racist.  I chose not to further engage the 15 year old on the matter. If I honestly believed that someone with a chance to win a presidential election might have terrorist inclinations I'd be seriously alarmed.     

An elderly white woman with limited mobility declined to have her ballot brought to her outside the polling place for casting and witnessing by an election official.  She said she was afraid her vote would not be counted if that happened and insisted on making her way inside instead.  She said she just wasn't going to let anything get in the way of her casting a vote that counted on this historic day which she said she never thought she would live to see.   

Only slept about 3 hours last night as a result of being much too wound up.  At least the SNL 2-hour special last night helped me let go of the worry a little and do some laughing. 

 

     

 

  

 

 


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Testing (to see if commenting on my own post gets my more recent comments dumped into my blog/my comments)

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Answer is: yes!, following a "refresh"

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Some Virginia numbers, as of roughly 4 pm this afternoon:

Presidential race
Fairfax County presidential: 58.4% for Obama/Biden to 40.6% for McCain/Palin, with 97.84% of precincts having reported as of 4 pm this afternoon. 62% turnout give or take. Truly a blowout. Raw numbers: 240,497-167,361. The County has about a million residents. It went D for Kerry, the first time it had gone D in a presidential since 1964, 53.3-46.0.

Statewide presidential: O/B carried the state by 51.71% to 47.25%, with 99.15% of precincts reporting as of 4 pm today. 70.72% turnout, about 8% higher than for Fairfax County, which I find interesting. In '04 Bush defeated Kerry by 53.7-45.5.

10th Congressional District race
Overall 10th CD (Fairfax county, northern Virginia, which is a DC suburb): 56-41 Frank Wolf (long-time incumbent R) over Judy Feder (D, challenging him for the second time).

The margin in our precinct was just about identical.

Disappointing. This was, it would seem, about as Democratic a year as we are likely to see. In my FTF contact with voters the level of knowledge about Judy was low. Ad buys are expensive in the DC metro area. Judy raised enough money to do some spots on TV late in the campaign.

Senate race
Highly popular former Governor Mark Warner's blowout win over challenger Jim Gilmore (also a former Governor) was a foregone conclusion. This was for the seat about to be vacated by the retiring R Senator John Warner. Statewide it was roughly 64-34.

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Correction on 10th CD: Overall 60.1-37.5. I'd been viewing only the Fairfax county portion of her vote totals. The 10th CD stretches over several counties.

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I enjoyed reflections on Virginia from denizen
rdb66

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The Onion's latest LOL piece.

Until Al completes the fix I shall periodically comment on my own post here in order to update the my comments part of my blog. This is because I really do enjoy conversing with people here but am unable to do so when unable to recall all of the different threads to which I have contributed when writing more frequently at the site.

I recognize that such comments dislodge the least recent comment on the Dashboards of the legions of folks who are "following" me. So I will try not to contribute totally content-less comments just to get the "my comments" update. It seems much more innocuous and respectful of fellow denizens to do it this way rather than post a new blog entry when I don't have anything I'd particularly like to say just to get the mycomments update.

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Trying link to Onion piece again...

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Important piece by Robert Kuttner on Bob Rubin.

While Kuttner's frontal assault on Rubin's reputation is a bit too bare-knuckled for some peoples' tastes, this should not color one's assessment of what he is saying.

Kuttner was for many years a writer for Business Week and served on the staff of the Senate Banking Committee in the late 1970s. It was chaired by former D Senator William Proxmire, he of the Golden Fleece awards to those ripping off taxpayers.

If you haven't read any of Kuttner's books, Everything for Sale is easily the best book I've come across for lay people on the pluses and minuses of markets, both theoretically and based on experience (even if one disagrees with him on airline deregulation, as some do).

He's come out with two important books within the last year.

The Squandering of America, billed as the sequel/update to Everything For Sale, is useful reading on the financial mess in particular.

In Obama's Challenge, a slender volume, Kuttner argues that if Obama governs boldly his can be a transformative presidency in the tradition of FDR, Lincoln and LBJ on civil rights. If he does not, he will be our era's Herbert Hoover, and suffer the same political fate. Kuttner offers his views on what governing boldly would look like, in outline form. It is important reading for understanding many of the dynamics around policy direction that are going to play themselves out within the Obama Administration as well as between it and various people and institutions on the outside.

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(Adding to this stimulating conversation with myself in order to refresh my comments)

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(refreshing mycomments)

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AmericanDreamer

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  • Location northern Virginia
  • Party Democrat
  • Politics idealist without illusions (what I work towards, at any rate, it being in the nature of illusions that one does not generally know when one has one)

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  • Favorite Books Too many. A few that come to mind are: The Irony of American History by Reinhold Niebuhr; Animal Farm and George Orwell generally; Cincinnatus: George Washington and the Enlightenment, by Garry Wills; RFK: A Memoir, by Jack Newfield; Hitler's Thirty Days to Power, by Henry Ashby Turner, Jr.

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