Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Voting in the Post Sandy World

Today, in the United States, it is election day.  We are electing a President, the House of Representatives, 1/3 of the Senate and also various local officials.

This is your choice today: vote or don't vote.  But for many in the Hurricane Sandy zone, voting is going to be just another burden on top of trying to get to work, trying to find a place with heat, and trying to find gas for your car or generator.

If you vote, you are joining people like my mother in law, who was away from her home for nearly a week due to Hurricane Sandy.  When I spoke to her Saturday, the thing uppermost on her mind was - not when her power would be restored (it was, shortly after I spoke to her) but if she would be able to vote.

I assured her she would, but to call her Board of Elections to find out if her polling place had changed.

People here in states that allow early voting were standing on long lines back in October to exercise their privlege.  People in Hurricane Sandy-affected areas today are going to go to a lot of trouble to vote.  A cousin who had to be out of town today voted by absentee ballot.


Haven't made up your mind yet?  Not an excuse.  My suggestion: don't vote based on one issue.  Examine your future carefully.  You are voting for both a future you can imagine and a future you can't.  A future that now includes the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, and if we will learn our lesson.

Vote for the candidates that best express the future you dream of. 

Governors Cuomo and Christie (Democrat and Republican) have joined in a common effort to make voting easier for their citizens.  Quoting from a news report:

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has agreed to issue an executive order that will allow displaced voters to cast ballots by affidavit at any polling site they can reach Tuesday.
The order will permit voters to sign affidavits that they're legally registered to vote in the presidential and state races and cast ballots at any open polling site, even those outside their neighborhoods.
But they won't be able to vote for state legislative candidates unless the polling place is within the proper legislative district.
New Jersey is allowing voters to use provisional ballots at any polling site"

Decisions on the fly,to cope with the conditions we now face.  That is true leadership.  Look for that quality in your candidate.

So now, if you are in the United States, make your country proud. Get out and vote.  And, a special thanks if you were impacted by Sandy. You are participating in history. Be proud.

It does matter.

2 comments:

  1. Great post...
    And, yes, while one can vote for President and Senator at any New York state polling place, the need for proper local government is now more starkly evident than before. If you can get to a local place (and there are plenty- albeit new ones), do yourself- and your children- the favor and vote your conscience.

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  2. "So now, if you are in the United States, make your country proud. Get out and vote. And, a special thanks if you were impacted by Sandy. You are participating in history. Be proud.
    It does matter."

    You have hit the nail squarely on the head. I'm not even American but I too follow these elections because I am proud to be someone who believes in the kind of democratic institutions and procedures that exist in America and, in my case, Britain.

    Elections are very important, and yes, they do matter. We are very lucky to have such free ones given the billions of people who are deprived of them, and all free citizens from wherever they may be should not forget that.

    Excellent piece this, thanks, and whoever the winner may be I wish all the best for him and for all Americans.

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