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Deadline to Register to Vote is Rapidly Approaching in Ridgewood

Vote Ridgewood NJ

photo courtesy of Dana Glazer

October 5th,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Voter-registration deadlines are quickly approaching in advance of the Nov. 8 general election. If you want to exercise your right to vote be it for or against Trump or Clinton or Full-Day Kindergarten you need to be registered to vote .There is still time if you still need to register to vote – or aren’t sure if you’re registered – here’s what you need to do before casting your ballot.

In the State of New Jersey :

– New Jersey’s deadline to register is Oct. 18.

– Check whether you are already registered at the New Jersey Department of State’s website.

– If you need to register, fill out the form for your county and bring or mail it to thecounty commissioner of registration or superintendent of elections for your county.

– The deadline to apply for a mail-in ballot is Nov. 1.

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Reader Gives Us the Presidential Debate Run Down

Great Debate 2016

“Hillary Clinton and Lester Holt came at Donald Trump last night as a “Tag Team.””
.
True.
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This is how it plays out….
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1. Each candidate declares victory in the debates
2. Press lauds Clinton (presidential, heroic, prepared, ad nauseum) and eviscerates Trump (idiot, unprepared, out of control, unfit to be president, ad nauseum)
3. Trump gets a bump in the immediate post debate polls
4. Media and pundits discount these polls and point out how they are inaccurate and flawed.
5. More polls from “respected sources” over the next few weeks still show a Trump bump
6. Much hand wringing, panic and threats to leave the country amongst the liberal elite if Trump becomes president .
7. Increase in anti-Trump reporting in the media.
8. Trump ultimately prevails in November.
9. Obama pardons a record number of criminals and signs a record number of executive orders before January 20th.
10. Liberals break promises to leave the country.
11. The really vicious Trump attacks start and last for 8 years.

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Reader says Hillary Clinton and Lester Holt came at Donald Trump last night as a “Tag Team.”

Lester Holt

Hillary Clinton and Lester Holt came at Donald Trump last night as a “Tag Team.” Neither felt bound by the need to tell the truth. Their attacks were self-indulgent and brazen. Holt was supposed to be neutral. Instead, he willingly prostituted himself, probably because he fears being removed from the DC/NY Dem/RINO cocktail party list. Holt saw up close what happened to Matt Lauer’s reputation after Lauer was deemed insufficiently antagonistic toward Trump during the Commander in Chief event a week or so ago, and Holt had no intention of suffering the same fate. Meanwhile, Clinton was a busy beaver, slapping down lie after lie and calmly luxuriating in her “safe space”, confident that Lester Holt would leave unmolested her deceitful edifice. Holt faithfully played the part of the Palace Guard, brazenly challenging Trump for every inch of land he tried to claim. Trump has only just started laying seige to Fort Hillary. He will sharpen his strategy and improve his performance as the debates proceed. Eventually, queen Hillary will be defeated and forced to submit to Trump’s terms. And what a great day that will be.

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N.J. lawmaker takes stand on ballot selfies

Vote Ridgewood NJ

file photo Dana Glazer

Terrence T. McDonald | The Jersey Journal
on September 21, 2016 at 4:55 PM

Jersey City Assemblyman Raj Mukherji wants to make sure no voters get in trouble for taking selfies in the voting booth.

Mukherji, a Democrat first elected to the Assembly in 2013, this week introduced legislation that would make it legal for voters to take photographs of their own ballot and share that photo on social media.

The bill comes as a federal appeals court in Boston hears a challenge to a New Hampshire ban on ballot selfie bans.

“Voter turnout can be pathetically low, especially in state and local elections,” Mukherji told The Jersey Journal. “If young people or anybody want to display their pride about being active in their democracy then we shouldn’t hold them back.”

The bill is co-sponsored by Assemblywoman Annette Chaparro, of Hoboken, and Assemblywoman Angelica M. Jimenez, of West New York.

https://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/2016/09/jersey_city_lawmaker_hopes_to_legalize_ballot_self.html?utm_content=New%20Campaign&utm_campaign=Observer_NJ_Politics&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=New%20Jersey%20Politics#incart_river_home

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Aleya Labs Launches Contempo Political App: Swipe Left for ‘the Left’ and Right for ‘the Right’

Contempo

September 25,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, there is new data about how politics cause family drama – and where Americans get their political news.

Ten percent of Americans said every event is complicated by political differences; while a chilled-out minority – three percent – said they didn’t think any were.

More than half (54 percent) of Millennials voted Christmas/Hannukah as the tensest social event due to political differences, nearly half (49 percent) said it was Thanksgiving and 47 percent said 4th of July, while their parents’ generation felt cocktails parties (38 percent) invited the most unpleasant discussions about politics.

The current political race is pitting generation against generation:

  • 20% of millennials say parents cause them grief
  • 20% of Gen Xers admit to disagreeing with their in-laws the most in politics
  • 20% of Baby Boomers say they fight most with their siblings due to political differences

Couples are in jeopardy too: one in four Americans say their significant other is supporting the “other” candidate.

Across age demographics, Americans voted CNN and Fox News as their favorite news sources when it comes to politics

As for most trusted political influencers, Americans said they read/listen to Bill O’Reilly the most for a conservative point of view (28 percent) and Anderson Cooper for a liberal point of view (45 percent).

The least popular? Americans rank Anna Navaro and Peter Wehner (both at .1%) as the lest watched conservative influencers and Sally Kohn and Kristen Powers (both at .1%) as the least popular liberal influencers.

This data comes from a new app called Contempo, which has a proprietary algorithm which analyzes the social media sentiment of liberal and conservative political influencers to show what’s actually trending on both sides. The app provides a quick snapshot of the political news landscape to inform and empower Americans during this election—and with an in-app browser to bring users back to the stories’ original homepage, it’s the perfect tool for on the go news.

Contempo is the first app from Aleya Labs, the company helmed by former Microsoft veteran, Sal Arora

Contempo can help. The app features a full integration with Rock the Vote, giving users the ability to register to vote, check polling locations, and check their registration status, without leaving the app.

Contempo is a free app and can be downloaded via the App Store.

 

 

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Quinnipiac Poll Puts Trump and Clinton too close to call

Trump_hat_boarder-theridgewoodblog

June 29, 2016

“Democrat Hillary Clinton has 42 percent to Republican Donald Trump’s 40 percent – too close to call – as American voters say neither candidate would be a good president and that the campaign has increased hatred and prejudice in the nation, according to a Quinnipiac University National poll released today.

This compares to results of a June 1 national poll by the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN- uh-pe-ack) University, showing Clinton edging Trump 45 – 41 percent.

When third party candidates are added to today’s survey, Clinton gets 39 percent with Trump at 37 percent. Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson gets 8 percent and Green Party candidate Jill Stein gets 4 percent.

“The 2016 election has increased the level of hatred and prejudice in the U.S.,” 61 percent of American voters say. Another 34 percent say it has had no impact. Of that 61 percent, 67 percent blame the Trump campaign and 16 percent blame the Clinton campaign.

“It would be difficult to imagine a less flattering from-the-gut reaction to Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton,” said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.

“This is where we are. Voters find themselves in the middle of a mean-spirited, scorched earth campaign between two candidates they don’t like. And they don’t think either candidate would be a good president.”

American voters are deeply divided along gender, racial, age and party lines. Women back Clinton 50 – 33 percent while men back Trump 47 – 34 percent.

White voters back Trump 47 – 34 percent. Black voters back Clinton 91 – 1 percent and Hispanic voters back her 50 – 33 percent. Voters 18 to 34 years old go Democratic 48 – 23 percent, while voters over 65 years old go Republican 51 – 35 percent.

Democrats go to Clinton 89 – 3 percent, as Republicans go to Trump 84 – 6 percent. Independent voters are divided with 36 percent for Trump and 34 percent for Clinton.

Both top candidates get negative favorability ratings, 34 – 57 percent for Trump and 37 – 57 percent for Clinton.

Trump will not be a good president, American voters say 58 – 35 percent.

Clinton will not be a good president, voters say 53 – 43 percent.

American voters say 58 – 33 percent that Clinton is better prepared to be president than Trump; 53 – 33 percent that she is more intelligent and 46 – 37 percent that she has higher moral standards. But voters say 45 – 37 percent that Trump is more honest and trustworthy and 49 – 43 percent that he is a stronger leader.

Looking at who would best handle important issues, American voters say:

52 – 40 percent that Trump would be better creating jobs;
50 – 45 percent that Clinton would be better handling immigration;
52 – 39 percent that Trump would be more effective handling ISIS;
51 – 42 percent that Clinton would better respond to an international crisis;
46 percent would trust Clinton more on sending U.S. troops overseas, while 44 percent would trust Trump more;
54 – 35 percent would trust Clinton more to make the right decisions regarding nuclear weapons;
46 – 43 percent that Clinton would do a better job getting things done in Washington.

“The matchup numbers say ‘tie’ and Trump is perceived as a job creator. But Clinton is seen as better prepared for the top job, better in an international crisis, managing immigration, making Washington functional, and keeping the nuclear codes under lock and key,” Malloy said.

From June 21 – 27, Quinnipiac University surveyed 1,610 registered voters nationwide with a margin of error of +/- 2.4 percentage points. Live interviewers call land lines and cell phones.

The Quinnipiac University Poll, directed by Douglas Schwartz, Ph.D., conducts public opinion surveys in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Florida, Ohio, Virginia, Iowa, Colorado and the nation as a public service and for research. Visit https://www.quinnipiac.edu/polling or www.facebook.com/quinnipiacpoll Call (203) 582-5201, or follow us on Twitter @QuinnipiacPoll.”

https://www.qu.edu/news-and-events/quinnipiac-university-poll/national/release-detail?ReleaseID=2363

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Paramus and Fair lawn Top Bergen’s Influential Local Races

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10 of the Most Influential Local Races in 2015

With the November 3 election expected to draw low voter turnout, some local races seem to be the best hope for driving people to cast their ballots. Here is a list of ten races that have the potential to influence the election. Alyana Alfaro, PolitickerNJRead more

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These election results send a clear message to special interest groups like Valley, the developers and sad to say now, the sports lobby

VOTE_theridgewoodblog.net_-300x22511

These election results send a clear message to special interest groups like Valley, the developers and sad to say now, the sports lobby

These election results send a clear message to special interest groups like Valley, the developers and sad to say now, the sports lobby. What a disaster for youth sports in this town to have been dragged down by a handful of agenda driven zealots who somehow felt that the only way to get a new field was to get one of their own on the Council. And then there’s our opportunistic Mayor who thought that he could parlay that zeal into getting another inexperienced one issue candidate to vote with him.

Great work by the CRR and CBR to shine a light on the issues and get the vote out. I hope they continue to work together to shut down the current Master Plan Amendment processes. Now it’s time to get the 2007 Ordinance off the books before the next wave of special interests come along to amend the Master Plan for their own gain.

Good luck to Mrs. Knudson and Mr. Sedon.

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