Voting in Durham

As of October 1st, the Durham Board of Elections listed 168,482 “active voters” in Durham. (Active voters is a technical term used, but not defined, by the Board of Elections.)

Early voting has started; in fact we’re 10 days into the 17 days of One Stop Voting. I voted yesterday, and the machine said that my ballot was the 9735th ballot read. That number represents the cumulative total for that particular voting location (in my case, the Board of Elections, which is downtown across the street from the old Durham Bull ballpark). And that got me curious about how voting was going in the rest of Durham.

As of the end of the day yesterday (Friday), 44,563 people have already voted in Durham County.

So, if all of the people who have voted were considered by October 1st to be active voters, then that means that Durham has already a 44% 27% rate of voter turnout. Of course, that percentage is actually lower, given the record-breaking number of new registrants and first time voters signed up to vote in this election. Nevertheless, for 44,563 people to have voted already bodes well for the possibility of setting new records in Durham for voter turnout.

For some sense of perspective, in this May’s primary, 80,321 people voted.
In the 2006 general election, Durham had 56,213 turn out to vote.
In 2004, 111,685.
In 2002, 67,505.
And in 2000, 87,467.

With early voting locations at the Durham Board of Elections office, Duke University, East Regional Library, Forestview Elementary, North Carolina Central University, North, Regional Library, and Southwest Elementary and with early voting dates every day of the week (including Saturdays and Sundays), there is no excuse not to vote this year.

If you wait until Election Day (November 4th), you need to vote at your precinct. If you don’t know where that is, try using this simple tool to find your polling place. http://maps.google.com/vote

Obama’s counting on us to get out the vote. No excuses.

Other accounts of early voting:
Diane Daniel
Barry Ragin

 

Obama rides bike with the family before heading to Raleigh


Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., goes for a bike ride in Chicago, Sunday, June 8, 2008.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

from the AP article:

Barack Obama joined family and neighbors for a bicycle ride along the shores of Lake Michigan on Sunday.

Obama, who last week claimed the Democratic presidential nomination, capped his victory with a quiet, long weekend at home in Chicago.

The Illinois senator and his wife, Michelle, rode to a neighbor’s house with their daughters, Malia and Sasha, on Sunday and the group then headed out for the ride along the scenic lake shore. But the outing was cut short by a downpour.

Obama’s brief respite from the campaign was scheduled to end Monday with a speech in Raleigh, N.C., and an evening fundraiser in St. Louis. The speech will launch a two-week tour of the country focused on economic issues.

Earlier in June, when asked with whom they would rather spend a day cycling, most chose Obama. Backpacker magazine reports that poll respondents were asked the question…

“You are lost in the woods and a storm is coming, who would you choose to lead you to safety?” Of all respondents polled, 22 percent felt Obama was the best choice, followed by 19 percent for Clinton and 18.5 percent for McCain.

President Bush came in last place with 12.1 percent, a full 4.7 points behind Homer Simpson. I’ve never seen Ol’ Georgie work a topo and a compass, but it can’t be a good sign when people choose to trust the route-finding skills of a fictional character — and a notoriously bumbling, animated one at that — over yours.

When poll respondents were asked who they would rather spend a day-long bike ride with, Obama cleaned up yet again, this time earning 30.2 percent of the vote over Hillary’s 29.2 percent. This time, John McCain fell to the back of the pack, garnering only 13.8 percent support. If elected, the 71-year-old McCain will become the oldest U.S. president ever — certainly not an ideal drafting partner, but a harsh assessment nonetheless. Luckily for him, neither time trials nor sick singletrack skills figure into any of the presidential debates.

But perhaps they should

— Ted Alvarez