I was the last voter in line, Tuesday night. It was a new polling place for me, as I had moved from the other side of town about half a year ago.
The voting process required you to first get a smart card loaded with your identity code (or something like that), before you could stand in a long line to await your turn with one of 20 (?) touch-screen Diebold voting machines.
It gave me time to review the sample ballot I'd received in the mail. By the time I reached a machine, I was all set to race through the menus and choices. I managed to finish before a few others, even though I was the last to get to a machine.
Viewing the election results, I see that some of my votes were cast for the winning candidate or measure, but many lost.
Ah well, i've found voting to almost be like a game of chance. Especially if you don't know the local voter's mindset and demographic backgrounds. (Not that I care to always vote with the majority, but it's always interesting to compare one's votes with the election results.)
I first started voting when I lived in San Francisco. I spent hours trying to prepare for the moment of casting many votes. (They've got lotsa local and statewide propositions to wade through.) So I was interested in comparing my efforts to the outcomes.
SF was mostly liberal or leftist. (I'm sure it still is.) On statewide measures, I found that liberal/leftist Bay area votes would be negated or defeated by votes from more conservative parts of California, like the San Joaquin valley.
Here in my part of Baltimore County, I'm guessing the electorate tends toward Republican, since the Republican Congressman and Republican State Senator and Republican State Delegates were re-elected. Yet the electorate in Maryland is overwhelmingly Democrat, so statewide offices were usually won on Tuesday by Democratic candidates.
It'll be interesting to see how certain winners turn out:
Sen.-elect Ben Cardin -- I used to live in his Congressional District and have seen him, live, a few times.
Pat McDonough -- re-elected member of the State House of Delegates... has sought passage of laws making English the official language of the state or county. This kind of grandstanding generally turns me off, but it would have a silver lining if it set up ways to fund and organize English language classes.
Nancy Pelosi -- of course, she represents SF, but she grew up in Baltimore, in Little Italy. Her father was a Congressman, and then became Baltimore's mayor (1947-59).
Today's Baltimore Sun has a brief article about her childhood, and reactions by old friends to her upcoming House speakership.
(I suppose Republican propaganda has tried to paint her as representing immoral San Franciscan values, but maybe a better yardstick might be gritty Baltimoron perseverance.)
Posted by raacluse at November 9, 2006 9:15 PMThanks for the link to the "little girl from Little Italy" makes good article. I never would have seen it otherwise.
I am glad you were able to vote, even if you were the last person in line, and kudos for having the perseverance.
Posted by: powerpolitics at November 9, 2006 10:57 PMThe Wash. Post has a similar roots profile of Pelosi in today's ish. This one is a little less personal and more contextual.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/09/AR2006110901581.html
Posted by: raacluse at November 10, 2006 10:57 AM