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Politics : The Donald Trump Presidency -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: techtrader73 who wrote (16354)11/5/2016 5:49:33 PM
From: StockDung2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Ms. Baby Boomer
toccodolce

  Respond to of 74613
 
Go feed crazy to someone else. Trump is going to win Florida.

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Posted November 5, 2016 03:11 pm
By
BRANDON LARRABEE

News Service of Florida

Quinnipiac poll: Florida ‘too close to call’


TALLAHASSEE — There might not be a national television commentator writing “Florida Florida Florida” on a whiteboard, as Tim Russert infamously did on the night of the 2000 presidential election, but both parties will be eagerly watching the Sunshine State on Tuesday as the polls close.

For real-estate mogul Donald Trump, the surprise Republican presidential nominee, Florida’s trove of 29 electoral votes is a necessary building block of virtually any scenario that ends with him winning the White House. For former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, a victory in Florida carries with it the potential of a knockout blow, all but ensuring that Trump won’t be able to cobble together a winning collection of states.

Florida also stands at an intersection of many of the issues reshaping the American electorate, both in 2016 and beyond: Can Trump turn out the disaffected white voters who powered him to the GOP nomination in numbers large enough to win the general election as well? Will African-American voters remain energized after the historic glow of electing the nation’s first black president? Does the nation’s growing Latino population make hard-line immigration policies like those advocated by Trump politically untenable?


That has prompted both campaigns to invest heavily in the state, both in persuading voters and, more recently, turning them out to cast ballots. Trump, Clinton and President Barack Obama — one of Clinton’s most effective surrogates — have repeatedly bounced in and out of the state during the closing weeks of the election.

The result has been a race in which the two candidates are running virtually neck-and-neck in polling averages, and the prospect of a late night or even another dreaded recount looms.

“I really think we’re right where we always are, which is a 1 percent election,” said Susan MacManus, a political-science professor at the University of South Florida.

The messages of the campaigns and their allies in Florida have closely mirrored those nationwide. For Republicans: Clinton’s private email server and involvement in her family foundation show her to be an untrustworthy and out-of-touch member of the Washington, D.C., elite that Trump rails against.

“Our country is rigged, it’s crooked and it’s broken,” Trump said during a recent campaign swing through Tallahassee. “ ... The criminal conduct of Hillary Clinton threatens the foundations of our democracy; it really does. But we’re going to turn it around. A new day begins for America and it starts on Nov. 8.”

Clinton, meanwhile, has mixed an appeal for unity with lacerating attacks on Trump’s temperament, fitness for offense and divisive comments.

“When I think about all of the people that Donald Trump has insulted in this campaign, literally, he has insulted a huge majority of the American people,” she said recently in Sanford, according to a transcript provided by the campaign. “I mean, think about it. He started with immigrants, moved on to Latinos, African Americans, Muslims, people with disabilities, prisoners of war, and then women.”

If the goal was to drive voters to the polls, it might be working. Nearly 4.9 million Floridians had voted early, either by mail or in person, by Thursday morning, according to state statistics. Again, the results so far appear to be on the edge: Democrats had returned almost 1.94 million ballots; Republicans almost 1.95 million. The rest of the votes came from Floridians registered with third parties or without a party affiliation.

Still, both parties have reason to worry about the makeup of those voters. On the Democratic side, some Clinton supporters were concerned that black voters didn’t appear to be showing up in large enough numbers early on --- potentially eating into the demographic advantage that Democrats believe they enjoy in Florida presidential elections.

“The question, of course, is whether or not the African-American turnout is going to be comparable,” said Kevin Wagner, a political-science professor at Florida Atlantic University.

Another key part of the Obama coalition seems to be voting.

“What we are seeing is, Hispanics actually are turning out in surge proportions so far,” said Steve Schale, a Democratic strategist who oversaw Obama’s Florida campaign in 2008.

Meanwhile, at least one previously solid bloc of Republican voters doesn’t appear to be enthusiastic about Trump: Cuban-Americans who dominate Miami-Dade County politics. In the March presidential primary, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio defeated Trump in one of Florida’s 67 counties: Miami-Dade.

Rubio is likely trying to turn out those same voters again, this time in his battle to hold onto his Senate seat.

“That’s an area (Trump) needs to shore up because they’re high-turnout voters,” MacManus said.

Trump’s fortunes might depend more, though, on whether he can get white, working-class voters frustrated with the economy to the polls. Some of those voters have not traditionally participated in elections, or might not have backed Republicans as strongly in the past as they will Trump’s protectionist message.

“If Trump wins,” Schale said, “it’s going to be because he just drove Democratic support among whites into the ground




To: techtrader73 who wrote (16354)11/5/2016 5:54:17 PM
From: StockDung1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Ms. Baby Boomer

  Respond to of 74613
 
Trump now up by 5 on LA Times Poll graphics.latimes.com



To: techtrader73 who wrote (16354)11/5/2016 5:59:26 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 74613
 
Arkansas Ballot Typo Puts 'Liar' in Hillary Clinton's Name
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Hilliarious Typo

Hillary Clinton's first name was spelled "Hilliary" on 2016 election ballots printed for use in Lonoke County, Arkansas.

David Emery Nov 05, 2016 Share 421





Report Advertisement

Claim: Hillary Clinton's first name was spelled "Hilliary" on election ballots printed for use in Lonoke County, Arkansas.

True

Example: [Collected via e-mail, November 2016]

Reports that Lonoke County, Arkansas ballots spell Hillary Clinton's name "HilLIARy. Please investigate.

Origin:It's a head-scratcher. No one seems to know how it happened, but the ballots printed up for use by Lonoke County, Arkansas residents in the 2016 general election contained a suspicious typo: Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's name is spelled with an extra "i" — "Hilliary" — as in "Hil-liar-y."

KARK 4 News in central Arkansas confirmed the misspelling with county elections officials, who said it happened despite multiple proofreadings:

"It is amazing that that many people missed it," Jerry Shepard, chairman of the Lonoke County Election Commission, said.

After crossing what they thought was every T under the sun, the Lonoke County Election Commission admits there was an I that not only didn't need to be dotted but should never have appeared on the ballot.

"We were not made aware of it until voting began," Shepard said.

"Hillary has an extra I in it, but Clinton is spelled perfectly correctly," Shepard said.

Shepard, we should note, is a Republican, though his fellow commissioner Jimmy Wallace is a Democrat, and Wallace agreed that no defamation was intended. Not everyone was willing to take it for granted that the misspelling was an innocent mistake, however. A local voter posted this blunt accusation on Facebook:

They spelt it “Hilliary” which I’ve seen some of my friends say Lonoke county did this on purpose to spell liar.

I would like to believe that they did not do this on purpose because I think it was just a spelling error. However I did contact the clerks office and told them of this error and they told me that they are blowing it off because they don’t expect people in Lonoke county to vote for Hillary Clinton.

Whoever I spoke to they were rude and they just laughed off my complaint so I decided to call the Arkansas Secretary of State’s office. They took my complaint and forwarded me to the Arkansas Election Commission, where I filed an official complaint on the Lonoke County Clerks office.

Shepard said there wouldn't be enough time to reprint the ballots before election day.

Originally published: 05 November 2016



sources:
Boozer, Chelsea. "Misspelling on One Arkansas Ballot Effectively Inserts 'Liar' into Hillary Clinton's First Name."
Arkansas Online. 5 November 2016.

Miller, Shannon. "Hillary Clinton Typo Appears on Lonoke County Ballots."
KARK 4 News. 2 November 2016.



To: techtrader73 who wrote (16354)11/5/2016 8:39:57 PM
From: StockDung3 Recommendations

Recommended By
MJ
Ms. Baby Boomer
toccodolce

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74613
 
“We’re winning in North Carolina. We’re winning in Ohio. We’re winning in New Hampshire. We’re winning in Iowa. We’re winning in Florida. We’re winning all over the place. They’re going crazy,” Trump said of the press.

“We’re winning almost everywhere, folks. This is going to be Brexit. This is going to be special.”

“Hillary Clinton is a candidate of yesterday. We are the movement of the future,” said Trump.



To: techtrader73 who wrote (16354)11/5/2016 10:47:05 PM
From: MJ2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Ms. Baby Boomer
Old Boothby

  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 74613
 
You sure are pushing liar Hillary on this board.

Trump and Pence are going to trounce the naysayers.

Why did you decide suddenly to come to the Trump threads.

Just curious.

mj

Women for Trump and Pence