Our BetterMost Community > Chez Tremblay
WOOOOO-EEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!
LauraGigs:
--- Quote ---(which brings up the question, I wonder how Jack and Ennis would have voted...now there's a new topic! )
--- End quote ---
NewYears, I put that topic up a few days ago on the polls. Check it out! ;D
ednbarby:
--- Quote from: newyearsday on November 08, 2006, 12:21:23 pm ---I'm eagerly awaiting the announcements about Virginia and Montana too.
--- End quote ---
It may be a long wait, judging from how past recounts have gone. But not to worry. The Senate is in the bag. Our guys are ahead - in Montana by 2500 and in Virginia by 7000+. And I just heard on NPR that the last time they did a recount in Virginia it was for Attorney General. The Dem was ahead by a couple thousand votes and the Republican ordered a recount that took well into December and all it served to do was add 37 more votes to the loser's (and I mean that on a number of levels) tally.
It's *all* good. ;D
I'm sorry to hear of the voting results in Colorado, but I take heart in the fact that Arizona voted against a gay marriage ban - the first state to do so - and that Idaho voted against a tough abortion law that the fundies were hoping would be contested had it won and go all the way to the Supreme Court, marshalling in an overturning of Roe v. Wade, and that Missouri voted for stem cell research.
I do believe the tide is turning, folks. And not one moment too soon.
My next prediction - Bush is gonna cut Rummy's strings. Maybe even at 1:00 today. But if not today, soon. Very soon.
nakymaton:
--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on November 08, 2006, 12:32:34 pm ---Well, I have mixed feelings. The good news is, in Colorado we have a democratic governor AND a democratic legislature. None of that Beauprez character who put me in a bah-humbug mood by speaking at my firstborn child's high school graduation! But the bad news is that our brave new domestic partnership bill didn't pass, and the definition-of-marriage amendment did. Bah! The Focus on the Family crowd won despite the Haggart affair, which might have actually hurt our chances rather than help them.
--- End quote ---
Ditto.
We've still got some pretty toxic people in office in the House (Musgrave, and that guy from Colorado Springs, at the very least, though I don't get CO news down here, so I don't know much about them), and in the Senate (Allard), but at least we have the less-toxic governor.
And, yeah, I think the Haggard affair probably hurt domestic partnership and gay marriage in Colorado, too. I was pretty stressed out by the tone of the stories I read, and worried that there might be more backlash from the anti-gay crowd than support from the people who voted Democrat.
And conservatism in Colorado may have traditionally been of the Libertarian sort, but it sure isn't right now. Republicans who don't tow the socially conservative line have been nearly run out of the party.
I thought it was South Dakota that decided not to ban abortions?
jpwagoneer1964:
--- Quote from: ednbarby on November 08, 2006, 01:27:34 pm --- the first state to do so - and that Idaho voted against a tough abortion law that the fundies were hoping would be contested had it won and go all the way to the Supreme Court, marshalling in an overturning of Roe v. Wade, and that Missouri voted for stem cell research.
--- End quote ---
And exactly how is killig babies a good thing?
nakymaton:
Look -- the map of voting on Colorado's anti-gay-marriage amendment shows where the mountains are. Not exactly, but pretty darn close.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2006/pages/results/states/CO/I/05/
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version