Hey folks, it ain't over till the fat lady sings.
*nods*
ETA: Ohio is not called yet, for very good reason. The polls that had to remain open late were in the heavily Democratic north. That's where the flood of people were who stood in line for 9 hours to vote. Those are the votes that haven't been counted.
It's similar to Pennsylvania, which leaned Bush as the lower population outer counties were counted, but swung back to Kerry once Philadelphia was counted.
*nods*
ETA: Ohio is not called yet, for very good reason. The polls that had to remain open late were in the heavily Democratic north. That's where the flood of people were who stood in line for 9 hours to vote. Those are the votes that haven't been counted.
It's similar to Pennsylvania, which leaned Bush as the lower population outer counties were counted, but swung back to Kerry once Philadelphia was counted.
no subject
Date: 2004-11-02 11:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-03 12:23 am (UTC)Like our pro tem governor, actually, eh? I haven't kept up on Cali politics since I left it for the great Northeast for college, but it sounds like he's doing a passable job so far.
I'm very much in favour of Cali declaring independence. The rest of the nation couldn't get along without us and hell, we're more populous as a state than many European nation-states. We're also better than the rest of the nation (I'm pissed off at 11 states right now about queer rights, and I will be even when I stop being pissed (drunk)). The fragmented nation-state nature of Europe has been working for many years; no reason why it wouldn't for the U.S., really.