It takes a special kind of stupid to think Herschel is a hypocrite on abortion while supporting a "pastor" who supports partial birth abortion right up until the moment of birth and even a little after if necessary.
Anyone who thinks Democrats can lose a mail in election when they're allowed to harvest and count their own votes is delusional.
You sure have drunk the Trump orange Kool-Aid.
Pretty much the entire western world refuses to use mail in voting for a reason and they all made this decision long before the scary orange showed up to live in your tiny mind 24/7 in 2016.
Pretty much the entire western world refuses to use mail in voting for a reason and they all made this decision long before the scary orange showed up to live in your tiny mind 24/7 in 2016.
Pretty much the entire western world refuses to use mail in voting for a reason and they all made this decision long before the scary orange showed up to live in your tiny mind 24/7 in 2016.
That is false.
“Currently, 14 countries in Europe provide in-country postal voting opportunities to voters,” Heinmaa said in an email. “In eight of these countries, all voters are eligible, and in six only voters in certain outlined categories may vote.”
In Switzerland, where some studies say postal votes account for 90 percent of all votes in the country, all eligible voters are sent ballots, which they can either send in by mail or bring to polling booths, weeks before elections. In some regions, voters can also cast ballots online.
“The maps in the report show clearly more than two — and some very prominent Western European nations — have in-country postal voting,” Orr said. “Germany, the U.K. and Poland alone — three big E.U. democracies — allow any elector to vote by mail (albeit Poland may have extended this for covid periods). The countries that don’t, you will see, also invariably offer mobile voting (a.k.a. ‘visitor voting’) to ensure the frail, hospitalized, disabled etc. can vote. Some, like the U.K., have not just in-country postal voting but ‘proxy’ voting — a general right to send, say, a relative to vote on your behalf!”
Pretty much the entire western world refuses to use mail in voting for a reason and they all made this decision long before the scary orange showed up to live in your tiny mind 24/7 in 2016.
That is false.
“Currently, 14 countries in Europe provide in-country postal voting opportunities to voters,” Heinmaa said in an email. “In eight of these countries, all voters are eligible, and in six only voters in certain outlined categories may vote.”
In Switzerland, where some studies say postal votes account for 90 percent of all votes in the country, all eligible voters are sent ballots, which they can either send in by mail or bring to polling booths, weeks before elections. In some regions, voters can also cast ballots online.
“The maps in the report show clearly more than two — and some very prominent Western European nations — have in-country postal voting,” Orr said. “Germany, the U.K. and Poland alone — three big E.U. democracies — allow any elector to vote by mail (albeit Poland may have extended this for covid periods). The countries that don’t, you will see, also invariably offer mobile voting (a.k.a. ‘visitor voting’) to ensure the frail, hospitalized, disabled etc. can vote. Some, like the U.K., have not just in-country postal voting but ‘proxy’ voting — a general right to send, say, a relative to vote on your behalf!”
“Currently, 14 countries in Europe provide in-country postal voting opportunities to voters,” Heinmaa said in an email. “In eight of these countries, all voters are eligible, and in six only voters in certain outlined categories may vote.”
In Switzerland, where some studies say postal votes account for 90 percent of all votes in the country, all eligible voters are sent ballots, which they can either send in by mail or bring to polling booths, weeks before elections. In some regions, voters can also cast ballots online.
“The maps in the report show clearly more than two — and some very prominent Western European nations — have in-country postal voting,” Orr said. “Germany, the U.K. and Poland alone — three big E.U. democracies — allow any elector to vote by mail (albeit Poland may have extended this for covid periods). The countries that don’t, you will see, also invariably offer mobile voting (a.k.a. ‘visitor voting’) to ensure the frail, hospitalized, disabled etc. can vote. Some, like the U.K., have not just in-country postal voting but ‘proxy’ voting — a general right to send, say, a relative to vote on your behalf!”