High, I just read that Georgia needs to recount all votes manually
and I wonder what manually is supposed to mean. Do they otherwise
use machines? If so, why does it take so long? In Germany, the
polling stations close at 18:00 and we usually get the manually
counted preliminary results between 22:00 and 23:00 on that same
day. And I cannot remember any election where the final results
changed noteworthy.
What happens if multiple recounting two parties/candidates have
exactly the same number of votes? Do you hold a second election or
flip a coin?
Tschoe mit Oe Gerhard --- * Origin: (2:240/2188.575)
This year, it was more complicated because of a larger number of mail in ballots than normal.
Am 11 Nov 20 14:33:32 schrob Charles Pierson an Gerhard Strangar
zum Thema <Counting votes> CP> This year, it was more complicated
because of a larger number of mail in CP> ballots than normal.
What's complicated about those? We use two envelopes, the outer one
contains the name of the person who voted and needs to be on the
list and not have voted yet. Then the outer envelope gets opened and
the inner one goes into the mail-in box. After that, the inner ones
get opened and the ballots are put onto different stacks than the
in-person votes (to verify if the results differ are lot, which
might be due to attempted fraud). But neither opening envelopes nor
counting ballots is complicated.
I mean, I can understand not wanting to go be in a large crowd on
election day to vote. However, with the early voting option, I had many family members all over the country go vote in person without crowds.
On 11-12-20 07:00, Charles Pierson <=-
spoke to Gerhard Strangar about Counting votes <=-
I mean, I can understand not wanting to go be in a large crowd on
election day to vote. However, with the early voting option, I had
many family members all over the country go vote in person without
crowds.
I simply don't trust the mail enough to be 100% confident my ballot wouldn't get lost accidentally, let alone any potential fraud. I've
had too many instances of mail not mine being delivered to my address
to feel otherwise, and not just my neighbors, but mail for addresses
not in my neighborhood.
Am 12 Nov 20 07:00:30 schrob Charles Pierson an Gerhard Strangar
zum Thema <Counting votes> CP> I mean, I can understand not wanting
to go be in a large crowd on CP> election day to vote. However, with
the early voting option, I had many CP> family members all over the
country go vote in person without crowds. I've heard of people
waiting in line for over an hour. But what's going on there? Our
polling stations are open on Sundays from 8:00 to 18:00 hours with
500-1000 voters per station and I'd say they're pretty much
equipartitioned over time. Only when church is out there might be up
to 20 people at once, but I don't think it takes more than five
minutes for all of them to vote.
Tschoe mit Oe Gerhard --- * Origin: (2:240/2188.575)
On 11-12-20 07:00, Charles Pierson <=- -=> spoke to GerhardStrangar about Counting votes <=- CP> I mean, I can understand not
wanting to go be in a large crowd on CP> election day to vote.
However, with the early voting option, I had CP> many family members
all over the country go vote in person without CP> crowds. There
were crowds at many of the early voting places also. I saw reports
of six hour waits at some. That was in larger towns, e.g. Houston.
I simply don't trust the mail enough to be 100% confident myballot CP> wouldn't get lost accidentally, let alone any potential
fraud. I've CP> had too many instances of mail not mine being
delivered to my address CP> to feel otherwise, and not just my
neighbors, but mail for addresses CP> not in my neighborhood. I did
not trust the mail either, especially after seeing all that Trump
and his appointees were doing to muck up the post office. There was
a third option, which I used. Drop boxes where you could place your
mail in ballot.
I've heard of people waiting in line for over an hour. But what's going
on there? Our polling stations are open on Sundays from 8:00 to 18:00 hours with 500-1000 voters per station and I'd say they're pretty much equipartitioned over time. Only when church is out there might be up to
20 people at once, but I don't think it takes more than five minutes for all of them to vote.
On 11-12-20 07:00, Charles Pierson <=-
spoke to Gerhard Strangar about Counting votes <=-
I simply don't trust the mail enough to be 100% confident my ballot wouldn't get lost accidentally, let alone any potential fraud. I've
had too many instances of mail not mine being delivered to my address
to feel otherwise, and not just my neighbors, but mail for addresses
not in my neighborhood.
I did not trust the mail either, especially after seeing all that Trump DS>and his appointees were doing to muck up the post office.
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