Michigan voters will head to the polls Tuesday for the presidential primary election.
This year’s race has captured the interest of potentially thousands of new primary voters in Michigan. Here’s what you need to know before you head to the polls.
Michigan has a closed primary, meaning you have to choose when you arrive at the polling place whether you want a Republican or Democratic ballot. If you try to vote on both sides of the ballot, it will be disqualified. So be careful.
You don’t have to be a formal member of a party to participate. Any registered voter can request a ballot. You do have to make your selection in writing, but that does not lock you into any future obligations. The Michigan’s Secretary of State office has compiled a list of questions and answers about the primary election here. And find out how to mark your ballot.
And while this is a presidential primary election, there may be other things on your local ballot. Click your county for more: Macomb | Oakland | Wayne
Voters can find out if they are registered, download sample ballots and look up their voting precinct and poll location on the Secretary of State's elections website at vote.michigan.gov/mvic/.
Election Day voting procedure
The polls are open from 7 a.m.-8 p.m.
On Election Day, voters will be asked to show a photo identification card at the polls. If they do not have a photo ID, they can still vote, but must sign an affidavit attesting that they're not in possession of their ID.
Voters are prohibited from wearing or displaying election-related materials, such as buttons, clothing, pamphlets or stickers at polling places or within 100 feet of an entrance to a polling place.
Those who register to vote by mail must vote in person in the first election in which they participate. The restriction does not apply to voters who are 60 or older, active duty military, overseas or disabled.
Absentee ballots
The deadline to get an absentee ballot mailed by a local clerk expired on Saturday. But registered voters who applied for absentee ballots must return their ballots to the local clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day for their votes to count.
Michigan voters will head to the polls Tuesday for the presidential primary election.
This year’s race has captured the interest of potentially thousands of new primary voters in Michigan. Here’s what you need to know before you head to the polls.
Michigan has a closed primary, meaning you have to choose when you arrive at the polling place whether you want a Republican or Democratic ballot. If you try to vote on both sides of the ballot, it will be disqualified. So be careful.
You don’t have to be a formal member of a party to participate. Any registered voter can request a ballot. You do have to make your selection in writing, but that does not lock you into any future obligations. The Michigan’s Secretary of State office has compiled a list of questions and answers about the primary election here. And find out how to mark your ballot.
And while this is a presidential primary election, there may be other things on your local ballot. Click your county for more: Macomb | Oakland | Wayne
Voters can find out if they are registered, download sample ballots and look up their voting precinct and poll location on the Secretary of State's elections website at vote.michigan.gov/mvic/.
Election Day voting procedure
The polls are open from 7 a.m.-8 p.m.
On Election Day, voters will be asked to show a photo identification card at the polls. If they do not have a photo ID, they can still vote, but must sign an affidavit attesting that they're not in possession of their ID.
Voters are prohibited from wearing or displaying election-related materials, such as buttons, clothing, pamphlets or stickers at polling places or within 100 feet of an entrance to a polling place.
Those who register to vote by mail must vote in person in the first election in which they participate. The restriction does not apply to voters who are 60 or older, active duty military, overseas or disabled.
Absentee ballots
The deadline to get an absentee ballot mailed by a local clerk expired on Saturday. But registered voters who applied for absentee ballots must return their ballots to the local clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day for their votes to count. goldengate 发表于 3/7/2016 11:17:51 PM
刚在川哥fb上看到有人贴的 - “ATTENTION Donald J. Trump ATTENTION Donald J. Trump I am an Ohio voter and there is something going on with the Republican Primary ballot that you better have a look at....they have us voting twice for primary candidate in 2 different locations and we have tried to get answers from the gop, local election boards and the secretary of state and no one can tell us about the problem with the ballot....you better get on this and on this fast or there is a good chance you will get screwed at the Ohio Primary. The democrat primary ballot is correct and nothing wrong with it.”
刚在川哥fb上看到有人贴的 - “ATTENTION Donald J. Trump ATTENTION Donald J. Trump I am an Ohio voter and there is something going on with the Republican Primary ballot that you better have a look at....they have us voting twice for primary candidate in 2 different locations and we have tried to get answers from the gop, local election boards and the secretary of state and no one can tell us about the problem with the ballot....you better get on this and on this fast or there is a good chance you will get screwed at the Ohio Primary. The democrat primary ballot is correct and nothing wrong with it.” turtlezhu 发表于 3/7/2016 11:52:19 PM
刚在川哥fb上看到有人贴的 - “ATTENTION Donald J. Trump ATTENTION Donald J. Trump I am an Ohio voter and there is something going on with the Republican Primary ballot that you better have a look at....they have us voting twice for primary candidate in 2 different locations and we have tried to get answers from the gop, local election boards and the secretary of state and no one can tell us about the problem with the ballot....you better get on this and on this fast or there is a good chance you will get screwed at the Ohio Primary. The democrat primary ballot is correct and nothing wrong with it.” turtlezhu 发表于 3/7/2016 11:52:19 PM
刚在川哥fb上看到有人贴的 - “ATTENTION Donald J. Trump ATTENTION Donald J. Trump I am an Ohio voter and there is something going on with the Republican Primary ballot that you better have a look at....they have us voting twice for primary candidate in 2 different locations and we have tried to get answers from the gop, local election boards and the secretary of state and no one can tell us about the problem with the ballot....you better get on this and on this fast or there is a good chance you will get screwed at the Ohio Primary. The democrat primary ballot is correct and nothing wrong with it.” turtlezhu 发表于 3/7/2016 11:52:19 PM
If you had any doubt that the political establishment was trying to mess with conservative businessman Donald J. Trump, you have to see what’s going on in the Buckeye State!
In Ohio, where John Kasich is the Governor and the Secretary of State is a Republican, voters in the GOP primary are already casting their ballot in the mail. More than 70,000 ballots have already been filled out and mailed back.
And as the video explains (below,), while the Democrat ballot is easy to read, the Republican ballot is ridiculously confusing! This primary is “winner take all” so it will have a major impact on the final delegate count for the Republican convention.
The way the voting is shown on the ballot, Republicans actually have the chance to vote for President… TWICE!
Are Ohioans supposed to check a box at the top if they want their candidate to win? Or will checking both boxes get an extra vote? Ohio election officials don’t even know…
If you had any doubt that the political establishment was trying to mess with conservative businessman Donald J. Trump, you have to see what’s going on in the Buckeye State!
In Ohio, where John Kasich is the Governor and the Secretary of State is a Republican, voters in the GOP primary are already casting their ballot in the mail. More than 70,000 ballots have already been filled out and mailed back.
And as the video explains (below,), while the Democrat ballot is easy to read, the Republican ballot is ridiculously confusing! This primary is “winner take all” so it will have a major impact on the final delegate count for the Republican convention.
The way the voting is shown on the ballot, Republicans actually have the chance to vote for President… TWICE!
Are Ohioans supposed to check a box at the top if they want their candidate to win? Or will checking both boxes get an extra vote? Ohio election officials don’t even know…
因为这个吗? http://www.wsj.com/articles/donald-trump-faces-tests-of-strength-in-michigan-mississippi-1457398391 Donald Trump’s march toward the Republican presidential nomination faces new tests on Tuesday in Michigan and Mississippi, states where rivals John Kasich and Ted Cruz are betting their regional appeal will serve as an antidote to Mr. Trump’s outsider campaign. Mr. Kasich, the Ohio governor, is basing his candidacy on how he does in his home state’s March 15 primary, and is counting on performing well in a string of coming Midwestern primaries. For Mr. Cruz, the Texas senator, Mississippi represents the last of the Deep South states he once hoped to sweep on his way to the nomination. Mr. Trump has so far won every Southern state by large margins, except for Louisiana, where a surge by late-breaking voters on Saturday pushed Mr. Cruz to within three percentage points of the front-runner. Meanwhile, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, after engaging in taunts with Mr. Trump last week, has suddenly become almost an afterthought. He is fourth in Michigan polling, below the 15% threshold to win any delegates from the state. Mr. Rubio did take Sunday’s Puerto Rico primary, bringing his winning tally to just two of 20 contests held so far. On Tuesday, Michigan will award 59 delegates. Another 40 are at stake in Mississippi, 32 in Idaho’s primary and 19 in Hawaii’s caucuses. Tuesday’s contests will serve as an opening act to the next GOP main event—the March 15 winner-take-all contests in Ohio, which will award 66 delegates, and Florida, which has 99. Mr. Trump leads the GOP field with 384 delegates. Mr. Cruz is second with 300 delegates, Mr. Rubio third with 151 and Mr. Kasich has 37. It requires 1,237 delegates to clinch the party’s nomination. The New York businessman has handily led every public poll of Michigan Republicans this year.
The state’s early-voting numbers also presage a strong Trump showing. By Monday morning, more than 236,000 Republicans had already voted, a number that would be about one-quarter of the 2012 GOP primary turnout, according to figures from the Michigan secretary of state’s office. Michigan’s GOP early-voting turnout is up 18% from four years ago. In other states, Mr. Trump has done well in early voting only to have other candidates surge on primary day. In Louisiana, Mr. Trump beat Mr. Cruz 47% to 23% among votes cast before Saturday’s primary. But Mr. Cruz won votes physically cast at precincts, 40.9% to 40.5%. Monmouth University’s poll of Michigan Republicans released Monday indicated that last week’s raucous GOP debate in Detroit, during which Messrs. Trump, Cruz and Rubio attacked each other throughout, is having an impact on voters. Before the debate, Mr. Kasich’s support stood at 17%, compared to Mr. Trump’s 39% in Michigan. In the two days of voter surveys after it, the governor’s support huaren.used to 26%, while Mr. Trump’s fell to 32%. Mr. Cruz gained slightly and Mr. Rubio fell slightly, though the difference for both remained within the poll’s margin of error.
“We clearly have momentum going throughout the weekend,” Kasich campaign strategist John Weaver said in a Monday interview. “We had a lot of ground to make up on Mr. Trump, but I feel like we’re going to have a pretty good night.” In Michigan, Mr. Kasich’s team had more than 1,000 volunteers from Ohio knocking on doors and making phone calls this weekend. His top aides in the state speak of the same kind of end-stage momentum that propelled him to a second-place finish in New Hampshire. The Ohio governor is counting on performing well in the wealthy Detroit suburbs and the state’s rural north, which he was the only candidate to visit, while Mr. Cruz has an advantage in the state’s western half, where there are more social conservative voters. “The fact that he’s the only governor still in the field helps him,” said Stu Sandler, a former executive director of the Michigan Republican Party. “And he’s definitely using the Midwestern thing to his advantage.” Looking ahead, “a lot of people are watching what happens tomorrow,” said Ken Blackwell, a Republican who served as Ohio’s secretary of state and mayor of Cincinnati. “If Kasich pulls one out of the hat in Michigan, that gives him some geographical bragging rights going into Ohio.” Meanwhile, polling has been scarce in Mississippi and Idaho, but Mr. Trump is expected to win both contests. Mr. Cruz initially canceled a planned Monday appearance in Mississippi because of illness, but later scheduled another stop in the afternoon to prevent a Trump event from monopolizing local news in the homestretch. State Sen. Chris McDaniel, who mounted a tea party-backed challenge to GOP Sen. Thad Cochran in 2014, is co-chairing Mr. Cruz’s campaign. Mr. McDaniel stumped on Monday with Mr. Cruz, who also was endorsed by Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant on Monday evening. Former Sen. Trent Lott backs Mr. Kasich.
But endorsements haven’t proven much help in the 2016 GOP race. Mr. Rubio had endorsements from the Kansas governor, one of its senators and local GOP icon Bob Dole and still placed a distant third in Saturday’s caucuses.
“Trump is going to win Mississippi, there’s no doubt about that,’’ said Jackson-based GOP consultant Austin Barbour. Mr. Barbour, who was advising former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush before he dropped out of the race last month, is personally undecided—except for ruling out Mr. Trump, whom he says isn’t conservative enough. In Idaho, the Republican Party changed the nominating contest to a primary after Mitt Romney handily won the caucus in 2012. Mr. Rubio has visited three times, and drew large crowds of more than 1,000 people at two different stops on Sunday. Mr. Cruz and his father, Rafael Cruz, both campaigned in the state on Saturday. “This will be the first year the model will be tested as to whether the primary is working and making Idaho more of a player and not just a flyover state,” said Damon Watkins, the Republican national committeeman in Idaho, who is backing Mr. Rubio. —Patrick O’Connor contributed to this article.
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
要有个小蓝裙,象老克的卢文司机就好了。
这人人品有问题
cnn这大标题说内部人士在debate Rubio是否要退出,这会不会是cruz放出来的消息?
2) 我的建议被放在这里了,被修改了一下
https://trump4usa.wordpress.com/
其中看到一个comment: 3.Remind America that 8 of the 9-11 hijackers were REGISTERED TO VOTE!!
这个也是一个非常令人shocking的truth,以后这样的人越来越多,美国人再不团结起来,就不可能再有回头路了
所以这次TRUMP和GOP谈崩的话,我相信他一定会独立选举
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
除了他还有谁?trump不干这事。
机器人这个惨,白牺牲了为他拉票,最后被他踩死
啊,那谁都可以去投了? Trump也不管管
是要提前注册 再实地报名字? 那如果知道别人的名字 不查id就可以冒充吧,感觉还是查id靠谱些
MM的建议写的不错,辛苦了
所以我觉得Trump这人挺仁义的
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
那共和党的也可以这么做啊,有风险么,没风险的话让周围没入籍的朋友去都行啊。
Michigan voters will head to the polls Tuesday for the presidential primary election.
This year’s race has captured the interest of potentially thousands of new primary voters in Michigan. Here’s what you need to know before you head to the polls.
Michigan has a closed primary, meaning you have to choose when you arrive at the polling place whether you want a Republican or Democratic ballot. If you try to vote on both sides of the ballot, it will be disqualified. So be careful.
You don’t have to be a formal member of a party to participate. Any registered voter can request a ballot. You do have to make your selection in writing, but that does not lock you into any future obligations. The Michigan’s Secretary of State office has compiled a list of questions and answers about the primary election here. And find out how to mark your ballot.
And while this is a presidential primary election, there may be other things on your local ballot. Click your county for more: Macomb | Oakland | Wayne
Voters can find out if they are registered, download sample ballots and look up their voting precinct and poll location on the Secretary of State's elections website at vote.michigan.gov/mvic/.
Election Day voting procedure
The polls are open from 7 a.m.-8 p.m.
On Election Day, voters will be asked to show a photo identification card at the polls. If they do not have a photo ID, they can still vote, but must sign an affidavit attesting that they're not in possession of their ID.
Voters are prohibited from wearing or displaying election-related materials, such as buttons, clothing, pamphlets or stickers at polling places or within 100 feet of an entrance to a polling place.
Those who register to vote by mail must vote in person in the first election in which they participate. The restriction does not apply to voters who are 60 or older, active duty military, overseas or disabled.
Absentee ballots
The deadline to get an absentee ballot mailed by a local clerk expired on Saturday. But registered voters who applied for absentee ballots must return their ballots to the local clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day for their votes to count.
附近的人可以去看看情况。
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
让你朋友去看看情况就知道了。
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
“ATTENTION Donald J. Trump ATTENTION Donald J. Trump I am an Ohio voter and there is something going on with the Republican Primary ballot that you better have a look at....they have us voting twice for primary candidate in 2 different locations and we have tried to get answers from the gop, local election boards and the secretary of state and no one can tell us about the problem with the ballot....you better get on this and on this fast or there is a good chance you will get screwed at the Ohio Primary. The democrat primary ballot is correct and nothing wrong with it.”
志愿者mm赶快告诉你们director
这个人家campaign staff应该自己会看到的吧
看着真急人,基层组织的怎么这么差呢。
看回复已经有不少人report给有关人员了,但大家还是要多提醒周围选民投票时一定要多留个心眼
大家都瞪着眼呢
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
警方后来就把有问题的机器撤走了
恩,这应该算是fraud。 如果发现非法移民投票,拍照摄像举报之,会怎样,要是没人举报他们又怎么会被发现,这空子也太好钻了吧。
Trump好运!
Pray 一下,睡觉去
上面GOP的,下面猪党的简单明了,GOP的给了一堆选项,上下表格都可以选,就是可以作弊
If you had any doubt that the political establishment was trying to mess with conservative businessman Donald J. Trump, you have to see what’s going on in the Buckeye State!
In Ohio, where John Kasich is the Governor and the Secretary of State is a Republican, voters in the GOP primary are already casting their ballot in the mail. More than 70,000 ballots have already been filled out and mailed back.
And as the video explains (below,), while the Democrat ballot is easy to read, the Republican ballot is ridiculously confusing! This primary is “winner take all” so it will have a major impact on the final delegate count for the Republican convention.
The way the voting is shown on the ballot, Republicans actually have the chance to vote for President… TWICE!
Are Ohioans supposed to check a box at the top if they want their candidate to win? Or will checking both boxes get an extra vote? Ohio election officials don’t even know…
Read more: http://www.thepoliticalinsider.com/voter-fraud/#ixzz42HsSYiPv
Go Trump Go!!!
艾玛,笑死我了
这个能发给TRUMP 让他知道吗
好像再libreal也同时实现不了耶
加州是closed primary,要提前注册的。
http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/voter-registration/
Trump估计跟你一个打算。
https://www.yahoo.com/style/photo-donald-trump-daughter-chill-215510925.html
恩,第一眼感觉不好,不过看采访感觉还是个蛮低调谦逊的人,应该也是个聪明的女人,现在越看越顺眼了。
她挺好的啊,说话得体,举止不夸张,性格冷静温和,对孩子也很尽心尽责,。
她的气势绝对是大佬的女人,不能用小家碧玉的标准来限定她。而且,跟o8那位比起来,那还真是大家闺秀。
我以前看照片时候觉得假脸,可是看采访动态时候纯粹先被惊艳到了,怎么会那么温柔!现在也是越看越顺眼。
但是介于本人技术烂搞了几次搞不上去,如果有同学可以帮忙更新下,应该会对川哥的形象也有帮助
说话很得体 聪明
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
因为这个吗?
http://www.wsj.com/articles/donald-trump-faces-tests-of-strength-in-michigan-mississippi-1457398391
Donald Trump’s march toward the Republican presidential nomination faces new tests on Tuesday in Michigan and Mississippi, states where rivals John Kasich and Ted Cruz are betting their regional appeal will serve as an antidote to Mr. Trump’s outsider campaign.
Mr. Kasich, the Ohio governor, is basing his candidacy on how he does in his home state’s March 15 primary, and is counting on performing well in a string of coming Midwestern primaries. For Mr. Cruz, the Texas senator, Mississippi represents the last of the Deep South states he once hoped to sweep on his way to the nomination.
Mr. Trump has so far won every Southern state by large margins, except for Louisiana, where a surge by late-breaking voters on Saturday pushed Mr. Cruz to within three percentage points of the front-runner.
Meanwhile, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, after engaging in taunts with Mr. Trump last week, has suddenly become almost an afterthought. He is fourth in Michigan polling, below the 15% threshold to win any delegates from the state. Mr. Rubio did take Sunday’s Puerto Rico primary, bringing his winning tally to just two of 20 contests held so far.
On Tuesday, Michigan will award 59 delegates. Another 40 are at stake in Mississippi, 32 in Idaho’s primary and 19 in Hawaii’s caucuses.
Tuesday’s contests will serve as an opening act to the next GOP main event—the March 15 winner-take-all contests in Ohio, which will award 66 delegates, and Florida, which has 99.
Mr. Trump leads the GOP field with 384 delegates. Mr. Cruz is second with 300 delegates, Mr. Rubio third with 151 and Mr. Kasich has 37. It requires 1,237 delegates to clinch the party’s nomination.
The New York businessman has handily led every public poll of Michigan Republicans this year.
The state’s early-voting numbers also presage a strong Trump showing. By Monday morning, more than 236,000 Republicans had already voted, a number that would be about one-quarter of the 2012 GOP primary turnout, according to figures from the Michigan secretary of state’s office. Michigan’s GOP early-voting turnout is up 18% from four years ago.
In other states, Mr. Trump has done well in early voting only to have other candidates surge on primary day. In Louisiana, Mr. Trump beat Mr. Cruz 47% to 23% among votes cast before Saturday’s primary. But Mr. Cruz won votes physically cast at precincts, 40.9% to 40.5%.
Monmouth University’s poll of Michigan Republicans released Monday indicated that last week’s raucous GOP debate in Detroit, during which Messrs. Trump, Cruz and Rubio attacked each other throughout, is having an impact on voters.
Before the debate, Mr. Kasich’s support stood at 17%, compared to Mr. Trump’s 39% in Michigan. In the two days of voter surveys after it, the governor’s support huaren.used to 26%, while Mr. Trump’s fell to 32%. Mr. Cruz gained slightly and Mr. Rubio fell slightly, though the difference for both remained within the poll’s margin of error.
“We clearly have momentum going throughout the weekend,” Kasich campaign strategist John Weaver said in a Monday interview. “We had a lot of ground to make up on Mr. Trump, but I feel like we’re going to have a pretty good night.”
In Michigan, Mr. Kasich’s team had more than 1,000 volunteers from Ohio knocking on doors and making phone calls this weekend. His top aides in the state speak of the same kind of end-stage momentum that propelled him to a second-place finish in New Hampshire.
The Ohio governor is counting on performing well in the wealthy Detroit suburbs and the state’s rural north, which he was the only candidate to visit, while Mr. Cruz has an advantage in the state’s western half, where there are more social conservative voters.
“The fact that he’s the only governor still in the field helps him,” said Stu Sandler, a former executive director of the Michigan Republican Party. “And he’s definitely using the Midwestern thing to his advantage.”
Looking ahead, “a lot of people are watching what happens tomorrow,” said Ken Blackwell, a Republican who served as Ohio’s secretary of state and mayor of Cincinnati. “If Kasich pulls one out of the hat in Michigan, that gives him some geographical bragging rights going into Ohio.”
Meanwhile, polling has been scarce in Mississippi and Idaho, but Mr. Trump is expected to win both contests.
Mr. Cruz initially canceled a planned Monday appearance in Mississippi because of illness, but later scheduled another stop in the afternoon to prevent a Trump event from monopolizing local news in the homestretch.
State Sen. Chris McDaniel, who mounted a tea party-backed challenge to GOP Sen. Thad Cochran in 2014, is co-chairing Mr. Cruz’s campaign. Mr. McDaniel stumped on Monday with Mr. Cruz, who also was endorsed by Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant on Monday evening. Former Sen. Trent Lott backs Mr. Kasich.
But endorsements haven’t proven much help in the 2016 GOP race. Mr. Rubio had endorsements from the Kansas governor, one of its senators and local GOP icon Bob Dole and still placed a distant third in Saturday’s caucuses.
“Trump is going to win Mississippi, there’s no doubt about that,’’ said Jackson-based GOP consultant Austin Barbour.
Mr. Barbour, who was advising former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush before he dropped out of the race last month, is personally undecided—except for ruling out Mr. Trump, whom he says isn’t conservative enough.
In Idaho, the Republican Party changed the nominating contest to a primary after Mitt Romney handily won the caucus in 2012. Mr. Rubio has visited three times, and drew large crowds of more than 1,000 people at two different stops on Sunday. Mr. Cruz and his father, Rafael Cruz, both campaigned in the state on Saturday.
“This will be the first year the model will be tested as to whether the primary is working and making Idaho more of a player and not just a flyover state,” said Damon Watkins, the Republican national committeeman in Idaho, who is backing Mr. Rubio.
—Patrick O’Connor contributed to this article.
从各方面看,Trump几乎赢不了俄亥俄和密西根啊!参见tuer mm的贴
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06
Michigan
Polling Data
Ohio
Polling Data
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看到这个评论,是不是地面工作没做好啊,被小人钻了空子了。
☆ 发自 iPhone 华人一网 1.11.06