redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Mar. 5th, 2024 07:13 pm)
The Massachusetts presidential primary was today, as part of "Super Tuesday." Because Massachusetts has open primaries, I am registered as an "unenrolled" voter, meaning I can vote in whichever party's primary I like, and can decide that at the last minute.

I was dithering between asking for a Democratic primary ballot and voting for "uncommitted," as a message to Biden that I don't like his support of Netanyahu and think the US should be pushing (harder) for a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip, or a Republican ballot to vote against Trump, which at this point means for Nikki Haley. I made my decision at the last minute, when the poll worker asked me which ballot I wanted. I asked for a Republican ballot, meaning I voted in the Republican primary for the first time in my life.

Voting in the Republican primary feels weird; voting for a candidate I dislike and expect to lose also feels weird. I've often voted for candidates who I expected to lose, because I hoped they would win. Haley would be a horrible president, but not I think as bad as Trump. If the Massachusetts primary had been earlier, I would probably have gritted my teeth and voted for Chris Christie, who was running an anti-Trump campaign. Teeth gritted in part because I lived in New York City when Christie was governor of New Jersey.

The regular state primary will be in September, and I will happily take a Democratic ballot and vote for my incumbent congresswoman, Ayanna Pressley.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Sep. 12th, 2006 05:20 pm)
We have a primary election today. I have spent the last couple of weeks hanging up on phone calls that want to play me recordings from politicians saying either "vote for me" or "vote for my friend," because if I don't hang up I might decide I had to vote against the callers for interrupting me. And two weeks is time enough to decide to vote against every single candidate.

Instead, [livejournal.com profile] cattitude and I walked the couple of blocks to our polling place. We stopped outside long enough for me to ask our former assemblyman, Brian, why he's pushing this particular candidate for the state committee [1]; he'd called Cattitude about it a couple of nights ago, and me last night, but I wasn't up to taking the phone call. It seemed more or less plausible, so I voted for her. (Brian used to live in our building, now lives next door, and pays Cattitude for computer help now and then.) After talking to Brian, we walked into the building, and I said hello to Len, an old acquaintance who is now one of the election workers. He was sitting next to the voting booth; I gather from the conversation that he and his partner Alexei are still together, and he mentioned that another acquaintance, Sally, has left the neighborhood.

I voted (Eliot Spitzer, Mark Green, Brian's recommendations for civil court and state committee, and one randomly selected person for delegate to the judicial convention [voters are asked to choose five, but it works to choose one, or none]), waited for Cattitude (we use the same machine, because we live in the same place), and then we walked around the neighborhood before he went to the subway and I did my morning stretches and then came home.

Another gorgeous September morning, another primary election; nothing went wrong this time, unlike five years and a day ago, when I'd called in sick because I was being laid off so why push myself to go in when feeling unwell, but it was hard not to think back, with the weather so similar.

Even if I thought it would make a difference, I don't think I could bring myself not to vote, but maybe next primary I'll vote in the evening.

[1] Almost nobody cares about the state [2] committee, or knows what it is: it's internal Democratic Party stuff. I was boggled by getting a nicely printed flyer about that race in the mail.

[2] Yes, I misremembered this as county committee; corrected becaue I just opened a letter with no return address, and found it was a slightly belated "reelect me to the state committee" from this woman.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Sep. 12th, 2006 05:20 pm)
We have a primary election today. I have spent the last couple of weeks hanging up on phone calls that want to play me recordings from politicians saying either "vote for me" or "vote for my friend," because if I don't hang up I might decide I had to vote against the callers for interrupting me. And two weeks is time enough to decide to vote against every single candidate.

Instead, [livejournal.com profile] cattitude and I walked the couple of blocks to our polling place. We stopped outside long enough for me to ask our former assemblyman, Brian, why he's pushing this particular candidate for the state committee [1]; he'd called Cattitude about it a couple of nights ago, and me last night, but I wasn't up to taking the phone call. It seemed more or less plausible, so I voted for her. (Brian used to live in our building, now lives next door, and pays Cattitude for computer help now and then.) After talking to Brian, we walked into the building, and I said hello to Len, an old acquaintance who is now one of the election workers. He was sitting next to the voting booth; I gather from the conversation that he and his partner Alexei are still together, and he mentioned that another acquaintance, Sally, has left the neighborhood.

I voted (Eliot Spitzer, Mark Green, Brian's recommendations for civil court and state committee, and one randomly selected person for delegate to the judicial convention [voters are asked to choose five, but it works to choose one, or none]), waited for Cattitude (we use the same machine, because we live in the same place), and then we walked around the neighborhood before he went to the subway and I did my morning stretches and then came home.

Another gorgeous September morning, another primary election; nothing went wrong this time, unlike five years and a day ago, when I'd called in sick because I was being laid off so why push myself to go in when feeling unwell, but it was hard not to think back, with the weather so similar.

Even if I thought it would make a difference, I don't think I could bring myself not to vote, but maybe next primary I'll vote in the evening.

[1] Almost nobody cares about the state [2] committee, or knows what it is: it's internal Democratic Party stuff. I was boggled by getting a nicely printed flyer about that race in the mail.

[2] Yes, I misremembered this as county committee; corrected becaue I just opened a letter with no return address, and found it was a slightly belated "reelect me to the state committee" from this woman.
.

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