Hope you voted.
#1
Posted 2006-November-07, 19:44
Did not have this problem back in Chicago where we just voted for Daley as King and he ran the city.
#2
Posted 2006-November-07, 20:49
All I see is a very calm ripple instead.
<hoping that Allen hangs on in VA>
#3
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:05
keylime, on Nov 7 2006, 09:49 PM, said:
All I see is a very calm ripple instead.
<hoping that Allen hangs on in VA>
Seems like a blue tidal wave at this point close but yes....
With that said I liked Ford and Steele......but hard for a black man to win.
In my old home state a black man may run for president again......no one knows what he is so we will all project
#4
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:14
Allen as of 10.13pm is barely hanging on:
G F Allen Republican 1,052,606 49.86%
J H Webb Jr Democratic 1,033,221 48.94%
#5
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:15
According to my notes, so far, the GOP has lost 3 seats in the Senate and in the House.
#6
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:19
I hope steele runs again..but tough in such huge dem state. I liked ford....he was republican yes?
#7
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:20
keylime, on Nov 7 2006, 10:15 PM, said:
According to my notes, so far, the GOP has lost 3 seats in the Senate and in the Hourse.
Well the rep do not deserve to win anything but.....I guess we think the Dems will be worse? Maybe not...hard to mess up this bad.....
#8
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:21
I'd be interested to see how the House sets up now that the Central Time Zone's done with the balloting. Even if the GOP loses the House, a split Congress may not be necessarily a bad thing.
Santorum deserves much credit for staying true to himself. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvannia will sorely miss him.
#9
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:35
#10
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:43
#11
Posted 2006-November-07, 21:44
#12
Posted 2006-November-07, 22:35
#13
Posted 2006-November-07, 22:42
#14
Posted 2006-November-08, 07:31
keylime, on Nov 8 2006, 05:49 AM, said:
All I see is a very calm ripple instead.
What would look like a wave to you?
The Democratic Party has taken control of the House. The have picked up a minimum of four seats in the Senate. The last two seats are too close to call, however, there is a very real chance that the Republicans are going to lose in both Virginia and Montana. (As of 2:00 AM, Allen was down by 8,000 seats in Virginia. Tester is ahead by 2,000 votes in Montana)
This isn't the victory that I dreamed of. Lieberman winning re-election really soured the night for me. More significant, I'm have mixed feelings whether a pro-life, anti-gay rights "Democrat" is really all that much of an improvement over a moderate Republican. From what I can tell, this election boiled down to over-sight on the White House rather than any real political realignment. However, I consider that over-sight absolutely essential. Also, capturing the Governorship in Ohio is going to be very significant for the 2008 election cycle.
Finally, I hope that the extremely poor showing by the electronic voting machines demonstrates that a we need to invest some significant resources in overhauling this part of our electoral system.
#15
Posted 2006-November-08, 07:45
keylime, on Nov 8 2006, 06:14 AM, said:
In what way, shape, or form did good old Senator "Man on Dog" run a great campaign?
He was down in the polls between 5 and 15 points through the entire election.
He has some of the lowest approval ratings of anyone in Senate. (This means that people don't like his policies)
Many of his speaches were down right deranged
He LOST the election by 20 points...
I certainly agree that he spent a lot of money - he spent 25 million dollars compared to Casey's 15. However, he sure didn't provide a compelling message.
#16
Posted 2006-November-08, 10:25
Good job dems, time to put up or shut up.
And four more for the new improved Arnold in CA
#17
Posted 2006-November-08, 10:47
hrothgar, on Nov 8 2006, 08:31 AM, said:
I concur -- Lieberman was a dampner for me as was Ford's loss. I agree w/ you on principle regarding social issues but I think that the Dems took a practical stance. For instance, it would have been almost impossible to unseat Santorum (good riddance) without assuming a conservative stance on those issues.
Now, as long as they don't enact any legislation based on those obnoxious personal views, I couldn't care less what they say they believe...
#18
Posted 2006-November-08, 11:39
pclayton, on Nov 8 2006, 06:25 PM, said:
Dunno about threads, but I find it hard to understand how the American public can accept electronic voting machines with a record for obscurity, technical glitches, and a lack of a paper trail. And why some consider it a threat to American democracy when a foreign company considers buying shares of a voting machine company, while they are not worried for the lack of transparency in the first place, that would enable such a company to rig elections.
#19
Posted 2006-November-08, 12:24
#20
Posted 2006-November-08, 12:53