Well, here in Cali we sent away for my mom’s mail in ballot about 3 weeks ago and they conveniently forgot to mail it to her. she doesn’t get around well at all being 83 and needs to vote by mail or she can’t.
Would not surprise me if they purposely “lost” her mail in app because she is a registered Republican. That’s how badly we get screwed by democrats here in Los Angels county.
Now it looks as if she’s been disenfranchised.
That’s a shame.
Go vote for her. No one checks ID. (Not encouraging breaking the law. Just disgusted by the fact that you don’t need ID to vote )
We left post-American California last year. Best wishes.
When ACORN signs up old people to vote when they go to the polls they are told “You already voted”
Soros company counts the votes in several states (via machines) so you know who wins there.
Voter fraud is rampant, in the general Trump is gonna have to have about a 20% percent buffer to beat the dem.
The dem voter base is made up of, among others, millions of insurgent criminal invading colonists from south of the border plus this year several hundred thousand Islamics from the ME, 20% or more connected to ISIS (Obama and Clinton’s creation) who all will be voting.
My election day report, from the east SF Bay Area:
Went to vote in the morning. Polling place was near a school. Some unsavory-looking individuals were hanging out about 125 feet from the polling place. One of them came up behind me very fast but didn't touch me. It appeared to be a 12-year-old boy about to board a "short" school bus. I didn't like the feeling this gave me.
In the polling place, there was one (apparent) touch-screen machine, about four portable (open) booths for the paper ballot voters, and a scanner (Sequoia Voting Systems). I saw one voter head in to drop off a ballot in a mail-in envelope. One other voter was at the touch-screen machine.
I approached the table, gave my name and address, and signed in (I showed my ID though they did not ask for it).
I requested the Republican Party ballot. They said "we don't have any" and I waited patiently as they looked through the packets of ballots on the table (this was a two-sheet, three-sided ballot) and through a couple of boxes, until they finally located a sheaf of Republican Party ballots. I took my ballots and a pen, voted, tore off the stubs, and fed them one at a time into the scanner. I collected my "I Voted" sticker, thanked them, and left.
Now, what was the issue with them having trouble finding a Republican Party ballot to give me? The scanner apparently had registered less than 30 (two-sheet) ballots. Either the supply on the table had been exhausted (by an under-the-radar yet very determined bunch of local R voters), or they were trying to annoy me. Don't know which one it was.
Anyhow, that's the news from my (deep blue) neck of the woods.