Posted on 11/02/2004 10:07:20 AM PST by doug from upland
Put info and links about Hawaii here. Maui, I'll be back soon.
Aloha Ping Bookmark
Maui..sigh. three years have passed..sorry back to reality.
Aloha Hawaii brethren!
E kôkua mai ana `oe Bush?
Mahalo!
later tonight ping
e kokua Bush 100% !
Votes tonght (morning) can be seen at:
http://hawaii.gov/elections/reslt04/general/
Please Translate for us! We want to hear about Hawaii!
I got it off a "speak Hawaiian" website.
E kôkua mai ana `oe Bush?
Will you Help Bush?
So I keep asking this and no one answers. What are the voting hours in Hawaii? When do the polls close?
Polling stations close at 6:00 pm Hawaii time which is 5 hours ahead of eastern time.
So Hawaii will finish voting at 11:00 pm EST?
Thanks.
Another Hawaii Bump!
I think 7am to 6pm.
Hawaii is 5 hours BEHIND Eastern, not ahead of. But the poster who said 11 p.m. Eastern would be correct (6 p.m. Hawaii).
Hope it's not pau for Keoki today. Hawaii needs him now, and it could happen thanks to Linda Lingle!
GO KEOKI - '04!
right ... sorry for the confusion. This election has me all in a fluster.
Same here. I'm actually trying to stay away from TV and radio until 3 or so this afternoon so I can get some work done.
Hawaii Voters Head To Polls
President, Honolulu Mayor Among Tightest Races
POSTED: 8:23 am HST November 2, 2004
UPDATED: 9:07 am HST November 2, 2004HONOLULU -- Polls in Hawaii opened this morning at 7 a.m. and will stay open until 6 p.m.
The race for the presidency is expected to be one of the closest in U.S. history. Democrats and Republicans sent some of their top party members to the islands to drum up support in the last days before the election.
The Republicans sent Vice President Dick Cheney for a late-night rally Sunday. The Democrats brought in former Vice President Al Gore and Sen. John Kerry's daughter, Alexandra, for a rally last Friday at Farrington High School.
Hawaii voters will also be casting ballots in congressional, Honolulu mayor, county council, state legislative, school board and Office of Hawaiian Affairs races.
The race for Honolulu mayor was close at the primary election. Duke Bainum had 5,914 more votes than Mufi Hannemann. Frank Fasi, who also ran in the primary election, endorsed Hannemann after he was eliminated.
About 50,000 residents voted by early walk-in balloting which ended Saturday.
Nothing super new, but, ah well.
I'm thinking of heading out early since I heard the polls are pretty packed, long lines, etc.
those freepers you mention on your freeper page are/were not "freepers". I would imagine they are long gone.
They are still here.
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