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Post by pumpkinette on Sept 3, 2010 16:45:48 GMT
WONDERFUL news! MORE are coming out of willful denial! THANK YOU GOD! People, PLEASE research who you're going to vote for ONLINE. You're NOT going to get a fraction of the information on candidates by ONLY watching mainstream media SOLD-OUT ###***! Look at what the candidates DO NOT WHAT THEY SAY! People are learning! They're seeing that MOST in Republican/Democratic Parties are RUN by the SAME ###***. I've posted at least once before articles about this issue on here. They were willfully ignored, ie., NO COMMENTS on them. Very sad. I remember specifically posting 1 about how the candidates for US president in 2008 had a majority of the SAME ADVISORS, EXCEPT for Ron Paul! That's because he's not SOLD-OUT ###***! Also, please give 3rd parties a chance. I'm staying in Constitution Party UNLESS they get as corrupted as Democratic Party did (which I LEFT). I'm glad I NEVER joined Republican Party. This poll is WONDERFUL news. Thank God people are WAKING UP! They're seeing that for MANY years now no matter WHICH party has the majority and/or presidency, that our freedoms are slowly going, etc. news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20100903/el_yblog_upshot/more-dismal-poll-numbers-for-dems-but-gop-incumbents-could-be-in-trouble-tooMore dismal poll numbers for Dems, but GOP incumbents could be in trouble too By Holly Bailey If Democrats thought the 1994 election was bad, the party had better brace itself for November. A new USA Today/Gallup poll finds voters even more dissatisfied with the state of the country than they were in '94 and 2006, two so-called "change" elections where the party in power lost majority control of Congress. Echoing a trend we've seen all summer, the poll finds some exceptionally dismal numbers for Democrats: 49 percent of voters say they plan to vote for a Republican this fall, compared with just 43 percent who plan to support Dems. Two-thirds of Republicans say they are "extremely motivated" to vote in the election, compared with less than half of Democrats. But while Republicans are better positioned, GOP incumbents shouldn't be waving the victory flag just yet. The poll finds that voter discontent stems less from formal party affiliation than from anger at current officeholders. A whopping 75 percent of those polled say Congress would be "better" with new members. Among voters who say they'll vote GOP this fall, nearly half say they are motivated by a desire to beat Democrats, but by a 2-1 margin, they would rather vote for someone new than a current GOP member of Congress. (Photo of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid: Susan Walsh/AP)
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