join the sign war- place a sign in your yard or office window. drive around your neighborhood to...

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Join the Sign War- Place a sign in your yard or office window. Drive around your neighborhood to make sure signs didn’t come down overnight. Make sure candidate signs are up and looking sharp.

Act as a Designated Driver- Drive volunteers to targeted precincts and get voters to the polls.  Mail in Absentee Ballots- Make sure your friends and neighbors send in their absentee ballots early.

“Serve the Democratic Party by increasing political participation among all segments of the Democratic Community.”•African Americans•Asian Pacific Islander Americans•College Democrats•Ethnic Americans•Gay & Lesbian Americans

•Latino/Hispanic Americans•American Indian•Senior Americans•Young Democrats•Veterans & Military•Women

"It takes five times as many more petitionsignatures forour party tobe on the ballot than a major name candidate,"

Georgia passed a law in 1943 requiring that new party and independent candidates submit a petition signed by 5% of the number of registered voters in order to get on the ballot for any office. The result has been that since 1943, there has not been one third party candidate on the Georgia ballot for U.S. House of Reps.

If you're mad about this, contact your elected representatives to complain about Oklahoma's restrictive and discriminatory ballot access laws: - Over 40,000 Oklahomans signed petitions to place Nader on the ballot, but that wasn't enough! - Oklahoma has the highest signature requirement, per capita, of any state in the country - Oklahoma's signature deadline (July 15) is one of the earliest (only 8 states are earlier) - Oklahoma is one of only 7 states that don't allow write-in votes for U.S. President

The states in which the Libertarian Party now has ballot status are: AZ, CA, DE, GA, ID, IN, KA, MN, MS, MO, MT, NV, NM, OR, SC, SD, TX, UT, VT, WV, WI, and WY (22 OUT OF 50)

“The increase in independent voters in recent years has presented a challenge to political candidates, who no longer can rely on their parties to deliver the bulk of their votes.”

“One of the striking features of the 1996 election results is how voters in Democratic regions have become more Democratic, while voters in Republican regions have

become more Republican."

http://www.rnc.org/

http://www.democrats.org/

Another view of partisanship: the percentage of party-unity votes on

which a member agreed with a majority of his party

House Average Democrat: 80% Average Republican: 91%

Senate Average Democrat: 81% Average Republican: 89%

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