Originally posted by: Yossarian
having your vote count in the initial count is always a good thing.
Originally posted by: Yossarian
having your vote count in the initial count is always a good thing.
Originally posted by: KnickNut3
You have to plan ahead to get the ballot, and decide earlier.
Plus, it feels less "democratic." (The form of government, not the party.)
Originally posted by: gopunk
Originally posted by: Yossarian
having your vote count in the initial count is always a good thing.
er... why? it's too late then to influence people anyways... since the ballots are supposed to be postmarked on the election day.
Originally posted by: Yossarian
Originally posted by: gopunk
Originally posted by: Yossarian
having your vote count in the initial count is always a good thing.
er... why? it's too late then to influence people anyways... since the ballots are supposed to be postmarked on the election day.
I thought absentee ballots weren't counted unless the initial vote was "close".
Originally posted by: Yossarian
Originally posted by: gopunk
Originally posted by: Yossarian
having your vote count in the initial count is always a good thing.
er... why? it's too late then to influence people anyways... since the ballots are supposed to be postmarked on the election day.
I thought absentee ballots weren't counted unless the initial vote was "close".
Originally posted by: KnickNut3
My area you only get a guide to the ballot in the mail, not something you can mail back.
Absentee is a special application process, and it must be mailed back and RECEIVED by election day.
Well, states run elections, hence why this varies.
Originally posted by: gopunk
i'm just curious... i can't think of any advantage to *not* voting absentee...
Originally posted by: gistech1978
i voted absentee one year, had to track down a notary public.
sort of a PITA if you axe me.
Originally posted by: gistech1978
i voted absentee one year, had to track down a notary public.
sort of a PITA if you axe me.
Originally posted by: Bryophyte
Originally posted by: gistech1978
i voted absentee one year, had to track down a notary public.
sort of a PITA if you axe me.
Why would you need a notary? That kind of defeats the purpose (a lot of voters vote by absentee because they are handicapped/elderly and can't get out of the house easily.)
Originally posted by: gistech1978
Originally posted by: Bryophyte
Originally posted by: gistech1978
i voted absentee one year, had to track down a notary public.
sort of a PITA if you axe me.
Why would you need a notary? That kind of defeats the purpose (a lot of voters vote by absentee because they are handicapped/elderly and can't get out of the house easily.)
you sign the voter roll when you vote, there is someone there to see you sign it.
voting absentee, you sign the ballot or some form. you need someone there to witness it.
that was the breaks, dont know what else to tell ya.
