Vote late
But the mass movement toward early and absentee voting disrupts the rhythms of this republican waltz. It exaggerates the advantages of having the early money lead, preexisting ground game, and known-quantity name recognition of the incumbent. It cuts off critical classes of voters from obtaining the fullest picture of the candidates or changing their mind in light of “October surprises” or acts of God. It makes voter fraud both easier to perpetrate and harder to catch. And it undermines our central political rite — the act that binds We, the People — perhaps in ways we have not even considered.
To be sure, it would be ill-advised to eliminate early and absentee voting entirely. But their use should be discouraged and limited to cases of hardship. We rightly hold in contempt candidates who construct plastic personae out of nothing but the latest polling data, and think little of elected officials who govern in line with the slightest cavitation of their approval ratings. So why do some think it indicative of a robust and healthy democracy that millions of Americans, moved by a moment’s pique or a fleeting sentimentality, can lock in their preferences about the future of the country at any random date and time after the ticker tape falls at the party conventions?











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That’s right, Democrats! Election day is November 11th this year.
Remember, that date, 11/11.
Make sure you plan to vote on November 11!
UltimateBob on October 8, 2012 at 3:59 PM
I agree with this move toward tightening the election “window”… its swung way to wide IMO… Voting should be no more and no less inconvenient than renewing ones drivers license.
gatorboy on October 8, 2012 at 3:59 PM
No kidding.
Suppose someone casts an early ballot. Then they get run over by a truck and die.
While true, some people may die after voting on the official election day, we’ll have quite a few more dead people that will have voted a month prior to the election that wouldn’t have been voting (well, maybe as Democrat) otherwise.
AND of course, if one of Obama’s scandals finally make it to the mainstream press, all those people that voted early for him may have changed their minds.
One day for voting. Make it 24 hrs long. Make absentee ballots available via US Postal service.
ProfShadow on October 8, 2012 at 4:02 PM
But seriously, I agree with this. “Election Day” has become “Election Month.” It has gone a little too far.
UltimateBob on October 8, 2012 at 4:03 PM
I still remember voting for Bush in the panhandle of Florida after the media called it for Gore.
Grunt on October 8, 2012 at 4:06 PM
I just called to see the dates/time for eary voting in our small town here in TX. We plan to vote on 11/1 so it won’t be so busy as the 6th. With the way things ‘could’ be, one hopes and prays our votes get counted? But with bho/team, who knows?
BTW, any here in TX, please vote Cruz sentate!
L
letget on October 8, 2012 at 4:12 PM
I’m strongly opposed to early voting, just as I’m strongly opposed to registering to vote anywhere but in the courthouse, in person. Voting should require some effort.
I think absentee voting should continue. I applied to vote absentee once. I applied 2 months before the election and received my absentee ballot in the mail 1000 miles from home on election day.
single stack on October 8, 2012 at 4:17 PM
I think we should have absentee voting, but it shouldn’t be a month long period and it should be limited to legitimate hardships. (surgery/medical, job related, etc)
Way OT
Pew now has Romney leading by 4%, that’s a 12 point swing in three weeks.
midgeorgian on October 8, 2012 at 4:31 PM
This is where procrastination characteristic turn out to be a positive. Most Americans I hope are procrastinators when it comes to voting.
milemarker2020 on October 8, 2012 at 4:35 PM
Those of us that need to travel a lot at short notice for our job like early voting. Why wait? To give President Choom’s administration to fake up enough data to charge Mitt Romney with jaywalking back in 1964 and try to steal the election?
Here’s a Muppet News Flash (TM): If you don’t like early voting, don’t vote early! Or is it only bad when others vote early?
RoadRunner on October 8, 2012 at 4:36 PM
Absentee voting with a legitimate, verifiable reason… yes.
Early voting… no.
And I agree with single stack that voting should actually require some effort.
Shump on October 8, 2012 at 4:37 PM
I’m voting this weekend. Why? Because I’m from MA but going to school in Texas. I’ll be home this weekend for a wedding and so have made arrangements to vote while I’m there. I could vote absentee like I did in 2010, but its a huge hassle and I’d rather vote in person. I’m not registering to vote in Texas because I’ll be leaving in two years to go to grad school and races in Texas aren’t particularly competitive. So I remain registered in MA, where Scott Brown really needs my vote.
vegconservative on October 8, 2012 at 4:57 PM
Terrible editorial.
I understand their point, but it is not an editorial to write four weeks out from an election, and they way they wrote makes it almost seem like advice to its readers.
VOTE EARLY.
- It demoralizes the opponent.
- It creates momentum.
- It frees up activists to turn out the vote on November 6th.
Save it for November 8th you idiots on the TNR editorial board.
swamp_yankee on October 8, 2012 at 5:12 PM
Hmm, Boy Bib must be shaping up to be the resident unhinged Facebook comment troll. Check out his work from this headline article this morning.
WeekendAtBernankes on October 9, 2012 at 3:30 AM