English-speaking politics around the world didn’t vote in Alabama, and didn’t elect Trump. The phenomenon of white American women voting overwhelmingly against their interests – Roy Moore is against women having voting rights, for pity’s sakes – is worth examining on its own.
Perhaps this should go to a separate thread.
Really? Rural areas are largely unincorporated, so the county matters more than the town. I have lived nearly half my life in unincorporated areas in the Midwest. It’s not like Massachusetts where each town has like three different villages in it, and if you don’t know which village you’re in you must be from Out Of Town, but nobody knows what county they’re in.
The last few places I’ve lived have had multiple cities per county, and all that’s important for navigation or mail addressing is the destination city/town (or its general area). The only time the county matters is when I’m specifically needing to deal with the local government.
While I definitely remember the city I was born in, I’ve never before had the slightest reason to even think about the county that was involved (as it turns out, I now know the city and county name are related, but I sure wouldn’t have wanted to be quizzed on that in a stressful situation).
I’m not sure if it’s been verified that this was being asked, but if people were getting quizzed on birth county just to vote, that would be a pretty heavy weighting against anyone originally born out of state or whose family had moved around within the state.
(I also have to wonder what answer would be acceptable for a citizen born out of the country…)
97% of black women in Alabama voted for Jones. They weren’t the problem, they were the solution.
Sure, but that means the county you live in is important for voting, not the county you were born in. The only time I can think of that being actually important is as a plot detail for explaining what Mary and Joseph were doing in Bethlehem when Jesus was born.
In most democracies, it’s not where you were born, but where you live now and whether or not you have citizenship. Nobody cares where someone old enough to vote was born.
It’s definitely an urban/rural thing then. I’ve lived many places where I didn’t have a town name, and didn’t even have a street name (my address was something like 1234 N 50 E and that was good enough for the post office). There are probably a lot of people in rural Alabama who know what county they were born in but have no idea what city (if any) they were born in.
Of course, that really doesn’t help people who aren’t originally from rural Alabama, or who came from outside the state or even outside the country.
This exit poll shows the results are a little less crappy than previously reported:
What about the gerrymandering angle? Any news on how that skewed the results?
It’s popular vote for Senate?
Within each state, yes; different states have very different populations, so it’s rotten boroughs federally.
Is torrance in los angeles county? fuck if I know. Why is this important again?
Not the president, but this is some good news.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ryan-could-retire-after-2018-midterms-report/ar-BBGKovC
Lying NYTimes Fake news! SAD. /s
I wonder if he’s worried about Randy Bryce, who sounds like a decent sort of human.
https://twitter.com/ironstache
Huh… porque no onebox?
Goodbye USA, it was nice knowing you:
This is – I think – the first time I have seen a politician ask people not to donate.
So at least he seems to have a clue.
(and, for a little humor on it…)