MrOsman.com

  • Home
  • Psychology
  • AP Government
  • Sociology
  • Contact
  • My Schedule

Posts Tagged ‘Election Day’

3 Nov 2008

MSNBC’s Election Day Widget

Perhaps this can help ona few last minute ideas for your projects.

3 November, 2008 at 9:43 by mrosman

Tags: 2008 election, Election Day, MSNBC, Widget
Posted in Current Events, Electoral Process | 1 Comment »

31 Oct 2008

Approaching the witching hour

According to FirstRead:

We now have a good idea of where the two campaigns will spend their last four days until Election Day. Today, Obama campaigns in Iowa and Indiana, and in between the events he heads home to Chicago to spend part of Halloween with his daughters. On Saturday, he travels to Nevada (Henderson), Colorado (Pueblo), and Missouri (Springfield). On Sunday, it’s an entire day in Ohio (Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati). And on Monday, per the New York Times, Obama hits Florida (Jacksonville), North Carolina, and Virginia (Manassas). As for McCain, he spends his entire Friday in Ohio; campaigns in Virginia and Pennsylvania on Saturday; then he’s reportedly hitting New Hampshire; and on Monday, he’s supposed to barnstorm through six states (including western ones like Nevada), with a final stop in — get this — Arizona.

Good luck with your predictions!

31 October, 2008 at 9:25 by mrosman

Tags: Arizona, Chicago, Colorado, Election Day, FirstRead, Florida, Halloween, Indiana, Iowa, McCain campaign, Missouri, Navade, New Hampshire, New York Times, North Carolina, Obama campaign, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia
Posted in Current Events, Electoral Process | Comments Off

26 Oct 2008

Bet You Didn’t Know

Even I didn’t know this!!!

From takeyourkids2vote.org:

Do you know why Election Day is always the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November? Don’t worry. Most people don’t. That day was picked by Congress in 1845 because most Americans were farmers back then; and by November, most of the crops were in.

But, why Tuesday? That‘s because most of the people who lived in rural America had to travel quite a long way by horseback or carriage to reach the county seat where they voted. Monday wasn’t a good day because many people would need to begin traveling on Sunday, and that would have meant missing Church.

Why the first Tuesday after the first Monday? Lawmakers wanted to prevent Election Day from falling on the first of November for two reasons. First, because November 1st, the day after Halloween, is All Saints Day, a Holy Day for Roman Catholics. Second, since most merchants were in the habit of doing their books on the first day of the month, Congress chose a day that wouldn’t interfere with the business community.

Fascinating!

The lesson to be learned in this post is that I told you something incorrect in class:

I told you that the election date (the first Tuesday after the first Monday) has been set since the constitution was ratified by the original thirteen colonies. Obviously that’s not correct!

So after I did some historical research on this subject, I got to thinking about election day.

Even though Tuesdays made sense for elections in 1845, do they make sense 163 years later?

Tuesday, a work day, can be a difficult day for voters to make time to get to the polls. Saturday may be a more advantageous day to have election day. Citizens are less likely to be at work on a Saturday (although a significant amount of the populous does work on weekends) and more likely to be available to vote.

In 1845 election day was moved to Tuesday to encourage rural voters to make it in to town to vote. If election day was originally moved to Tuesday to encourage voting, why not move it to a day like Saturday in order to encourage voting?

In addition, other than tradition, why do we vote in November?

Why not vote the day after taxes are due, April 16th? This would surely encourage a more fiscally responsible government. Or why not vote on July 4th while patriotic spirits are high? Election day on July 4th would surely encourage a higher level of voter participation. Right?


26 October, 2008 at 21:18 by mrosman

Tags: 1845, All Saints Day, Citizens, Election Day, first tuesday after the first monday in November, fiscally responsible, July 4th, Roman Catholics, Saturday Voting, takeyourkids2vote.org, Tuesday, voter participation
Posted in American History, Electoral Process | 1 Comment »

  • MrOsman.com


    Moodle

  • Register/Login

    • Register
    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org
  •  
  • Courses

    • Psychology
    • AP Government
    • Sociology
  • Blogroll

    • Round Rock High
    • RRISD Moodle
    • SlideShare: PowerPoints
MrOsman.com is proudly powered by WordPress
Design & code by Jonk
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).