2004 General Election Results

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2004 General Election Results HOWELL TOWNSHIP GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 2, 2004 Howell Howell Library Ardena School Southard Fire House Adelphia School Land O' Pines School Griebling School Ramtown School Friendship Gardens St. Veronica's School Newbury School Aldrich School Villages Clubhouse 123456789101112 PRESIDENT George W. Bush R 420 504 400 552 386 406 611 556 497 424 344 245 John F. Kerry D 220 263 218 274 252 346 254 362 277 265 252 289 Michael Badnarik 200110040010 David Cobb 000110010011 Michael A. Peroutka 002000010001 Bill Van Auken 000100000000 Roger Calero 000000000010 Walter Brown 001000000000 Ralph Nader 345423189440 House of Reps (1) Christopher H. Smith R 442 533 421 563 408 406 584 592 521 434 383 271 Amy Vasquez D 147 174 155 179 181 288 196 247 195 174 162 211 Richard Edgar 9 4 6 11 6 6 12 13 14 9 8 3 Sheriff (1) Joe Oxley R 384 496 371 523 372 376 545 520 456 370 318 258 Dan Gibney D 200 197 189 220 201 307 232 318 240 214 219 240 Freeholders (2) Amy H. Handlin R 406 510 374 521 377 381 556 516 460 370 342 243 Rob Clifton R 380 474 345 498 357 360 534 502 436 355 306 224 Steve Morlino D 184 195 190 220 202 302 220 319 246 227 206 251 Jeffrey Pringle D 187 198 198 224 206 299 232 315 240 224 211 253 Mayor (1) Joseph Di Bella R 365 480 359 520 364 376 575 520 457 372 330 221 Steven A. Farkas D 197 208 185 232 216 287 214 285 223 208 200 278 James P. Garvey I 32 36 31 26 24 30 28 52 44 46 37 7 Councilmember (1) Cynthia Schomaker R 386 510 378 510 380 380 567 526 464 381 337 196 Barbara Dixel D 198 202 190 247 220 302 233 308 250 217 217 309 TOTAL VOTES 4162 4988 4018 5327 4156 4855 5594 5965 5029 4294 3879 3501 REGISTERED VOTERS 904 1075 992 1183 954 1181 1149 1402 1147 1014 908 825 VOTERS 645 773 629 833 644 756 856 935 784 704 604 544 % OF VOTER 71.35% 71.91% 63.41% 70.41% 67.51% 64.01% 74.50% 66.69% 68.35% 69.43% 66.52% 65.94% UNOFFICIAL TALLY PENDING PROVISIONAL BALLOT COUNT HOWELL TOWNSHIP GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 2, 2004 Taunton School Freewood Acres Fire House Middle School South Aldrich School Southard School Middle School South Ramtown School Moors Landing Clubhouse Surrey Downs Clubhouse Taunton School Howell Aid First Building Immanuel Bible Church 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 PRESIDENT George W. Bush R 534 456 592 279 411 443 317 291 239 436 608 258 John F. Kerry D 353 338 399 232 223 306 216 320 196 313 431 244 Michael Badnarik 101233210002 David Cobb 001012000000 Michael A. Peroutka 001000102000 Bill Van Auken 000000000000 Roger Calero 000000000000 Walter Brown 000000100001 Ralph Nader 5124835711171 House of Reps (1) Christopher H. Smith R 565 491 605 301 418 485 339 290 250 450 631 277 Amy Vasquez D 237 235 383 179 168 194 152 240 143 234 314 183 Richard Edgar 191612127108826137 Sheriff (1) Joe Oxley R 512 456 557 279 359 416 281 269 221 396 572 256 Dan Gibney D 278 269 320 200 208 257 202 268 170 271 362 201 Freeholders (2) Amy H. Handlin R 507 444 537 275 355 397 279 284 221 403 567 260 Rob Clifton R 471 407 509 269 341 385 258 255 210 390 554 247 Steve Morlino D 296 283 343 198 206 269 206 250 174 256 374 187 Jeffrey Pringle D 295 297 339 191 207 267 212 265 168 368 357 194 Mayor (1) Joseph Di Bella R 518 419 523 268 361 452 293 280 213 402 577 261 Steven A. Farkas D 271 261 301 158 197 230 178 257 179 267 332 181 James P. Garvey I 41 64 23 63 32 30 26 11 6 33 61 26 Councilmember (1) Cynthia Schomaker R 520 439 614 271 374 441 303 273 209 396 600 267 Barbara Dixel D 291 280 310 199 203 248 191 255 180 291 363 193 TOTAL VOTES 5714 5167 6374 3384 4077 4840 3472 3818 2784 4913 6723 3246 REGISTERED VOTERS 1285 1299 1381 761 992 1073 778 966 603 1108 1500 885 VOTERS 895 809 1001 522 642 759 545 616 440 872 1046 517 % OF VOTER 69.65% 62.28% 72.48% 68.59% 64.72% 70.74% 70.05% 63.77% 72.97% 78.70% 69.73% 58.42% UNOFFICIAL TALLY PENDING PROVISIONAL BALLOT COUNT HOWELL TOWNSHIP GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 2, 2004 Windmill Windmill Clubhouse Ramtown School Middle School North Griebling School Newbury School Land O' Pines School 25 26 27 28 29 30 SUBTOTAL ABSENT TOTAL PRESIDENT George W. Bush R 459 339 447 660 365 302 12781 751 13532 John F. Kerry D 340 199 214 362 235 248 8441 537 8978 Michael Badnarik 20200129231 David Cobb 10000111415 Michael A. Peroutka 00012011112 Bill Van Auken 000000 101 Roger Calero 000000 101 Walter Brown 000010 404 Ralph Nader 65974513810148 House of Reps (1) Christopher H. Smith R 500 345 455 672 397 326 13355 855 14210 Amy Vasquez D 227 139 146 269 147 167 6066 348 6414 Richard Edgar 16 7 18 7 9 6 284 16 300 Sheriff (1) Joe Oxley R 443 330 431 611 338 285 12001 760 12761 Dan Gibney D 275 159 180 317 188 199 7101 393 7494 Freeholders (2) Amy H. Handlin R 450 295 431 634 346 288 12029 743 12772 Rob Clifton R 422 277 405 606 320 271 11368 575 11943 Steve Morlino D 289 186 182 302 188 190 7141 393 7534 Jeffrey Pringle D 277 196 185 298 187 198 7288 375 7663 Mayor (1) Joseph Di Bella R 436 324 413 598 357 297 11931 740 12671 Steven A. Farkas D 250 167 179 319 161 176 6797 338 7135 James P. Garvey I 59 22 33 38 35 25 1021 86 1107 Councilmember (1) Cynthia Schomaker R 447 334 423 624 359 297 12206 745 12951 Barbara Dixel D 285 168 186 258 181 192 7167 399 7566 TOTAL VOTES 5184 3492 4339 6583 3820 3474 137172 8071 145243 REGISTERED VOTERS 1224 730 1031 1444 853 902 31549 VOTERS 811 543 674 1031 609 557 21596 % OF VOTER 66.26% 74.38% 65.37% 71.40% 71.40% 61.75% 68.45% UNOFFICIAL TALLY PENDING PROVISIONAL BALLOT COUNT.
Recommended publications
  • Poll Results
    March 13, 2006 October 24 , 2008 National Public Radio The Final Weeks of the Campaign October 23, 2008 1,000 Likely Voters Presidential Battleground States in the presidential battleground: blue and red states Total State List BLUE STATES RED STATES Colorado Minnesota Colorado Florida Wisconsin Florida Indiana Michigan Iowa Iowa New Hampshire Missouri Michigan Pennsylvania Nevada Missouri New Mexico Minnesota Ohio Nevada Virginia New Hampshire Indiana New Mexico North Carolina North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania Virginia Wisconsin National Public Radio, October 2008 Battleground Landscape National Public Radio, October 2008 ‘Wrong track’ in presidential battleground high Generally speaking, do you think things in the country are going in the right direction, or do you feel things have gotten pretty seriously off on the Right direction Wrong track wrong track? 82 80 75 17 13 14 Aug-08 Sep-08 Oct-08 Net -58 -69 -66 Difference *Note: The September 20, 2008, survey did not include Indiana, though it was included for both the August and October waves.Page 4 Data | Greenberg from National Quinlan Public Rosner National Public Radio, October 2008 Radio Presidential Battleground surveys over the past three months. Two thirds of voters in battleground disapprove of George Bush Do you approve or disapprove of the way George Bush is handling his job as president? Approve Disapprove 64 66 61 35 32 30 Aug-08 Sep-08 Oct-08 Net -26 -32 -36 Difference *Note: The September 20, 2008, survey did not include Indiana, though it was included for both the August and October waves.Page 5 Data | Greenberg from National Quinlan Public Rosner National Public Radio, October 2008 Radio Presidential Battleground surveys over the past three months.
    [Show full text]
  • 2000 11-07 General Election
    2000 General Election, Salt Lake County, Utah These results are for Salt Lake County only Summary Information Precincts Counted 688 Number of registered voters 444186 Total ballots cast 312098 70.26% Straight Party Ballots Cast Democrat 46553 46.04% Republican 50225 49.67% Independent American 3509 3.47% Libertarian 504 0.50% Natural Law 183 0.18% Reform 149 0.15% 101123 100% President and Vice President Democrat - Al Gore and Joseph Lieberman 107576 35.01% Republican - George W. Bush and Dick Cheney 171585 55.84% Green - Ralph Nader and Winona LaDuke 21252 6.92% Independent American - Howard Phillips and Curtis Frazier 896 0.29% Libertarian - Harry Browne and Art Olivier 1699 0.55% Natural Law - John Hagelin and Nat Goldhaber 388 0.13% Reform - Pat Buchanan and Ezola Foster 3676 1.20% Socialist - James Harris and Margaret Trowe 101 0.03% Unaffiliated - Louie G. Youngkeit and Robert Leo Beck 85 0.03% Write In - Earnest Lee Easton 0 0.00% Write In - Keith Lewis Kunzler 0 0.00% Write In - Forrest C. Labelle 0 0.00% Write In - Daniel J. Pearlman 0 0.00% Write In - Joe Schriner 0 0.00% Write In - Gloria Dawn Strickland 0 0.00% United States Senate Democrat - Scott Howell 130329 42.43% Republican - Orrin G. Hatch 168029 54.70% Independent American - Carlton Edward Bowen 4222 1.37% Libertarian - Jim Dexter 4597 1.50% United States House of Representatives U.S. Representative District 1 Precincts Counted 2 Registered Voters 688 Ballots Cast 319 46.37% Democrat - Kathleen McConkie Collinwood 151 49.51% Republican - James V.
    [Show full text]
  • RESOLVED, Political Parties Should Nominate Candidates for President in a National Primary Distribute
    8 RESOLVED, political parties should nominate candidates for president in a national primary distribute PRO: Caroline J. Tolbert or CON: David P. Redlawsk From the beginning, the Constitution offered a clear answer to the question of who should elect the president: the electoral college. Or did it? Virginia delegate George Mason was not alone in thinking that after George Washington had passed from the scene,post, the electoral college would seldom produce a winner. In such a far-flung and diverse country, Mason reasoned, the electoral vote would almost invariably be fractured, leaving no candidate with the required 50 percent plus one of electoral votes. Mason estimated that “nineteen times in twenty” the president would be chosen by the House of Representatives, which the Constitution charged with making the selection from among the top five (the Twelfth Amendment, enacted in 1804, changed it tocopy, the top three) electoral vote getters in the event that no candidate had the requisite electoral vote majority. In essence, Mason thought, the electoral college would narrow the field of candidates and the House would select the president. notMason was wrong: in the fifty-seven presidential elections since 1788, the electoral college has chosen the president fifty-five times. Not since 1824, in the contest between John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, and William Crawford, has the House chosen the president. And contrary to Do Mason’s prediction, the nomination of candidates has been performed not by the electoral college but by political parties. Copyright © 2014 by CQ Press, a division of SAGE. No part of these pages may be quoted, reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the publisher Political Parties Should Nominate Candidates for President in a National Primary 137 The framers of the Constitution dreaded the prospect of parties.
    [Show full text]
  • Hit and Run: the Rise and Fall of Ralph Nader
    DePaul Law Review Volume 24 Issue 4 Summer 1975 Article 21 Hit and Run: The Rise and Fall of Ralph Nader Patricia Flynn Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/law-review Recommended Citation Patricia Flynn, Hit and Run: The Rise and Fall of Ralph Nader, 24 DePaul L. Rev. 1082 (1975) Available at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/law-review/vol24/iss4/21 This Notes is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Law at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in DePaul Law Review by an authorized editor of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1082 DE PAUL LAW REVIEW [Vol. 24:1079 credit user. The major reasons given for default were loss of income due either to misfortunes in the job market or illness. Debtors who bought from direct sellers and used automobile dealers reported deceit in the original transaction much more frequently than did other debtors. When the various debtor and creditor characteristics are correlated to each issue, some unexpected findings occur. Race and income are only slightly related to whether a person reported actual receipt of a summons, while general quality of the neighborhood in which he lived and type of dwelling unit were more highly related to service. It was also found that the three most frequent creditor plaintiffs in New York, a bank, a direct seller, and a finance company, all had much lower rates of reported actual service than other similar creditors. The lowest rate went to the finance company, only 32% of whose customers reported actual receipt.
    [Show full text]
  • A Canadian Primer to the 2012 Us Primaries and Caucuses
    A CANADIAN PRIMER TO THE 2012 US PRIMARIES AND CAUCUSES A Policy Update Paper By Colin Robertson CDFAI Senior Research Fellow January, 2012 Prepared for the Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute 1600, 530 – 8th Avenue S.W., Calgary, AB T2P 3S8 www.cdfai.org © Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute A CANADIAN PRIMER TO THE 2012 U.S. PRIMARIES AND CAUCUSES Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 2 Who’s running for the Republicans and what are their platforms? .................................. 3 Where do they stand? ........................................................................................................... 3 What’s the difference between a primary and a caucus? .................................................. 3 Is the process starting earlier than usual? ......................................................................... 3 Are the Iowa caucuses (January 3) important? .................................................................. 4 What about the Iowa Straw Poll held last August? ............................................................ 4 And the New Hampshire primary (January 10)? ................................................................. 4 Do the parties do their primary process differently? ......................................................... 5 Haven’t there been a lot more candidate debates? ............................................................ 5 Do the debates matter? ........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • General Election Write-In Results
    2012 General Election - November 6, 2012 1 of 3 President - Personal Choice (Write-ins) Full Term - Vote for One Municipality Ward Dist Votes Total votes Chris Christie Avalon 1 1 4 Lower Township 1 9 1 Middle Township 8 1 Upper Township 2 1 Charlie Sheen Avalon 1 1 1 Ron Paul Avalon 2 1 101 Cape May 5 1 Dennis Township 4 2 Dennis Township 5 2 Dennis Township 6 3 Dennis Township 8 2 & Judge Andrew Napolitano (VP) Dennis Township mail-in 1 Dennis Township mail-in 1 & Donald Trump (VP) Dennis Township mail-in 1 Lower Township 1 2 1 Lower Township 1 6 1 Lower Township 1 9 2 Lower Township 2 1 1 Lower Township 2 3 3 Lower Township 2 5 1 Lower Township 2 8 1 Lower Township 2 10 1 Lower Township 3 1 2 Lower Township 3 2 1 Lower Township 3 3 1 Lower Township 3 5 1 Lower Township 3 6 1 Lower Township 3 9 1 Lower Township 3 mail-in 1 Middle Township 1 1 Middle Township 2 1 Middle Township 4 1 Middle Township 13 1 Middle Township 14 1 Middle Township 17 1 (1 Paul Ryan write-in as VP doesn't count) Middle Township mail-in 4 North Wildwood 1 1 1 North Wildwood 2 4 3 North Wildwood 2 mail-in 1 North Wildwood 2 provisional 1 Ocean City 1 1 2 Ocean City 1 3 1 Ocean City 1 4 1 Ocean City 1 5 1 Ocean City 2 3 1 Ocean City 2 mail-in 2 Ocean City 3 3 1 Ocean City 3 4 1 2012 General Election - November 6, 2012 2 of 3 President - Personal Choice (Write-ins) Full Term - Vote for One Municipality Ward Dist Votes Total votes Ron Paul (continued) Ocean City 3 mail-in 1 Upper Township 3 3 Upper Township 4 1 Upper Township 5 1 Upper Township 6 3 Upper Township 8
    [Show full text]
  • NTS Total Election Reporting and Certification System - Condensed Recanvass Report
    FRX2Any v.08.00.00 DEMO NTS Total Election Reporting and Certification System - Condensed Recanvass Report GREENE COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS General Election 11/04/2008 OFFICIAL GENERAL ELECTION County Wide - PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS FOR PRESIDENT & VICE PRESIDENT Ashland - Page 1 Whole Number DEM REP IND CON WOR GRE LBN WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT Barack Obama & John McCain & John McCain & John McCain & Barack Obama & Cynthia McKinney Bob Barr & Wayne CHUCK BALDWIN ALAN KEES HILLARY RON PAUL BLAIR ALLEN MIKE HUCKABEE NEWT GINGRICH Joe Biden Sarah Palin Sarah Palin Sarah Palin Joe Biden & Rosa Clemente A Root CLINTON 382 117 218 12 19 2 0 2 1 WARD TOTALS 382 117 218 12 19 2 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Ashland - Page 2 VOI SWP PSL POP Blank Votes Void Roger Calero & Gloria LaRiva & Ralph Nader & Alyson Kennedy Eugene Puryear Matt Gonzalez 0 0 2 9 WARD TOTALS 0 0 0 2 9 Athens - Page 1 Whole Number DEM REP IND CON WOR GRE LBN WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT WRT Barack Obama & John McCain & John McCain & John McCain & Barack Obama & Cynthia McKinney Bob Barr & Wayne CHUCK BALDWIN ALAN KEES HILLARY RON PAUL BLAIR ALLEN MIKE HUCKABEE NEWT GINGRICH Joe Biden Sarah Palin Sarah Palin Sarah Palin Joe Biden & Rosa Clemente A Root CLINTON 470 221 193 12 20 10 1 0 W:000 D:002 354 135 176 15 15 2 0 0 W:000 D:003 787 345 337 19 33 19 4 1 W:000 D:004 465 162 254 20 15 3 0 1 WARD TOTALS 2076 863 960 66 83 34 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Athens - Page 2 VOI SWP PSL POP Blank Votes Void Roger Calero & Gloria LaRiva & Ralph Nader & Alyson Kennedy Eugene Puryear Matt Gonzalez 0 0 0 13 W:000
    [Show full text]
  • Election Results
    Election Summary Report Date:02/02/08 Time:11:46:35 PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ELECTION Page:1 of 2 Summary For Jurisdiction Wide, All Counters, All Races ZERO REPORT Registered Voters 143441 - Cards Cast 0 0.00% Num. Report Precinct 140 - Num. Reporting 0 0.00% PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED DEM PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED GRN STATES - DEMOCRATIC PARTY Total STATES - GREEN PARTY Total Number of Precincts 140 Number of Precincts 140 Precincts Reporting 0 0.0 % Precincts Reporting 0 0.0 % Times Counted 0/0 Times Counted 0/0 Total Votes 0 Total Votes 0 MIKE GRAVEL 0 N/A CYNTHIA MCKINNEY 0 N/A JOHN EDWARDS 0 N/A JESSE JOHNSON 0 N/A CHRIS DODD 0 N/A RALPH NADER 0 N/A HILLARY CLINTON 0 N/A JARED BALL 0 N/A JOE BIDEN 0 N/A ELAINE BROWN 0 N/A BARACK OBAMA 0 N/A KAT SWIFT 0 N/A BILL RICHARDSON 0 N/A KENT MESPLAY 0 N/A DENNIS KUCINICH 0 N/A Write-in Votes 0 N/A Write-in Votes 0 N/A PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED LIB PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED REP STATES - LIBERTARIAN PARTY Total STATES - REPUBLICAN PARTY Total Number of Precincts 140 Number of Precincts 140 Precincts Reporting 0 0.0 % Precincts Reporting 0 0.0 % Times Counted 0/0 Times Counted 0/0 Total Votes 0 Total Votes 0 BOB JACKSON 0 N/A ALAN KEYES 0 N/A WAYNE A. ROOT 0 N/A MIKE HUCKABEE 0 N/A STEVE KUBBY 0 N/A DUNCAN HUNTER 0 N/A JOHN FINAN 0 N/A FRED THOMPSON 0 N/A BARRY HESS 0 N/A TOM TANCREDO 0 N/A DAVE HOLLIST 0 N/A RUDY GIULIANI 0 N/A ALDEN LINK 0 N/A JOHN H.
    [Show full text]
  • Federal Elections 2004
    2004 ELECTION RESULTS The following four sections present the primary, runoff and general election results for the U.S. Presidential and U.S. Congressional elections held in 2004. The November 2004 general election (and Louisiana’s December 2004 runoff election) resulted in the election of the 109th Congress. The following is the party composition of the 109th Congress, as determined by the results of these elections: U.S. Senate Republicans: 55 Democrats: 44 Independents: 1 U.S. House of Representatives Republicans: 232 Democrats: 202 Independents: 1 Notes on Charts * Runoff election vote totals have been included with the primary election totals. (For the U.S. Senate, runoff elections were held in Georgia and South Carolina. For the U.S. House of Representatives, runoff elections were held in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas.) For Louisiana, runoff election vote totals have been included with the general election totals. The following three situations account for blank spaces in the charts and should be considered when making comparisons or drawing conclusions about the vote totals. * In some states, i.e., Connecticut, Utah and Virginia, political parties may nominate general election candidates by party convention, rather than by primary election. * In some states, there were unopposed candidates whose names did not appear on a ballot and therefore received no votes. * 34 states had regularly scheduled U.S. Senate elections in 2004. 2004 PRESIDENTIAL POPULAR VOTE SUMMARY FOR ALL CANDIDATES LISTED ON AT LEAST ONE STATE BALLOT Candidate (Party Label) Popular Vote Total Percent of Popular Vote George W. Bush (Republican) 62,040,610 50.73% John F.
    [Show full text]
  • March 7, 2000
    PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ELECTION - MARCH 7, 2000 select contest U S PRESIDENT U S PRESIDENT Candidate Votes Percent HOWARD PHILLIPS, AIP 79 0.3 CHARLES COLLINS, RFM 14 0.0 DAVE LYNN HOLLIST, LIB 19 0.0 LARRY HINES, LIB 17 0.0 JOHN HAGELIN, NTL 41 0.1 ORRIN HATCH, REP 40 0.1 L NEIL SMITH, LIB 12 0.0 JOEL KOVEL, GRN 52 0.1 ALAN KEYES, REP 437 1.6 KIP LEE, LIB 21 0.0 LYNDON LAROUCHE, DEM 61 0.2 AL GORE, DEM 7713 29.5 GEORGE D WEBER, RFM 48 0.1 DONALD J TRUMP, RFM 61 0.2 JOHN MCCAIN, REP 6625 25.4 ROBERT BOWMAN, RFM 35 0.1 HARRY BROWNE, LIB 107 0.4 open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com BILL BRADLEY, DEM 2760 10.5 GEORGE W BUSH, REP 5608 21.5 GARY BAUER, REP 67 0.2 STEVE FORBES, REP 45 0.1 JOHN B ANDERSON, RFM 12 0.0 RALPH NADER, GRN 2204 8.4 top of page U S SENATOR Candidate Votes Percent TOM CAMPBELL, REP 5629 22.1 JOE LUIS CAMAHORT, RFM 135 0.5 BILL HORN, REP 1500 5.8 RAY HAYNES, REP 1328 5.2 BRIAN M REES, NTL 131 0.5 MICHAEL SCHMIER, DEM 684 2.6 VALLI S-GEISLER, RFM 57 0.2 GAIL K LIGHTFOOT, LIB 535 2.1 JP GOUGH, REP 119 0.4 LINH DAO, REP 79 0.3 DIANE B TEMPLIN, AIP 148 0.5 JAN B TUCKER, GRN 474 1.8 JOHN M BROWN, REP 202 0.7 MEDEA S BENJAMIN, GRN 1088 4.2 open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com DIANNE FEINSTEIN, DEM 13349 52.4 top of page U S REP IN CONGRESS Candidate Votes Percent RUSSEL J CHASE, REP 3602 14.8 KENNITH A HITT, REP 1628 6.7 EMIL P ROSSI, LIB 1162 4.7 PAMELA ELIZONDO, RFM 461 1.8 CHERYL KREIER, NTL 730 3.0 LAWRENCE R WIESNER,
    [Show full text]
  • RALPH NADER, : : Plaintiff, : : V
    Case 1:10-cv-00989-BAH Document 16-1 Filed 01/21/11 Page 1 of 21 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA : RALPH NADER, : : Plaintiff, : : v. : Civil No. 10-989-BAH : FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, : : Defendant. : : PLAINTIFF’S MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES IN SUPPORT OF MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT Plaintiff Ralph Nader (“the Candidate”) submits this Memorandum of Points and Authorities in support of his Motion for Summary Judgment against Defendant Federal Election Commission (“FEC” or “the Agency”). The underlying facts giving rise to this action are set forth in the Administrative Complaint that the Candidate filed with the FEC on May 30, 2008 (“Administrative Complaint”), AR00001-100, as supplemented by letters submitted to the FEC by the undersigned counsel on September 24, 2008 (“First Supplement”), AR00609-728, and on January 7, 2010 (“Second Supplement”).1 AR01732-90. Those facts are summarized in the Complaint that the Candidate filed with this Court on June 11, 2010 (“Complaint”) and are not disputed by the FEC in its Answer to the Complaint, which was filed on August 23, 2010 (“FEC Answer”). Indeed, the FEC cannot dispute the underlying facts in this matter, because on April 13, 2009 – nearly two years after the Administrative Complaint was filed – the Agency closed the file without even notifying most of the respondent parties (collectively, “Respondents”) that a complaint had been filed against them, and without conducting any investigation whatsoever. 1 The Second Supplement is incorrectly dated January 7, 2009. Case 1:10-cv-00989-BAH Document 16-1 Filed 01/21/11 Page 2 of 21 Because the FEC does not and cannot dispute the underlying facts set forth in the Administrative Complaint, those facts are incorporated by reference into the Candidate’s Statement of Material Facts as to Which There Is No Genuine Dispute.
    [Show full text]
  • Cumulative Report
    Cumulative Report — Official HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO — AMENDED GENERAL ELECTION — November 04, 2008 Page 1 of 26 12/06/2008 01:19 PM Total Number of Voters : 429,267 of 605,634 = 70.88% Precincts Reporting 880 of 880 = 100.00% Party Candidate Early Voting Election Day Total For President and Vice-President, Vote For 1 DEM Barack Obama & Joe Biden 61,852 57.39% 163,361 51.48% 225,213 52.98% REP John McCain & Sarah Palin 45,006 41.76% 150,524 47.44% 195,530 46.00% Ralph Nader & Matt Gonzalez 410 0.38% 1,493 0.47% 1,903 0.45% LIB Bob Barr & Wayne Allyn Root 249 0.23% 1,018 0.32% 1,267 0.30% CON Chuck Baldwin & Darrell L. Castle 127 0.12% 444 0.14% 571 0.13% GRE Cynthia McKinney & Rosa A. Clemente 84 0.08% 313 0.10% 397 0.09% Richard Duncan & Ricky Johnson 28 0.03% 70 0.02% 98 0.02% SOC Brian Moore & Stewart Alexander 13 0.01% 65 0.02% 78 0.02% Alan L. Keyes & Brian Rohrbough (W) 2 0.00% 18 0.01% 20 0.00% Joe Schriner & Dale Way (W) 1 0.00% 3 0.00% 4 0.00% Donald K. Allen & Christopher D. Borcik (W) 1 0.00% 2 0.00% 3 0.00% Jonathan Allen & Jeff Stath (W) 0 0.00% 2 0.00% 2 0.00% James R. Germalic & Martin Wishnatsky (W) 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% Platt Robertson & Scott Falls (W) 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% Cast Votes: 107,773 98.70% 317,313 99.14% 425,086 99.03% Over Votes: 408 0.37% 484 0.15% 892 0.21% Under Votes: 1,014 0.93% 2,272 0.71% 3,286 0.77% For Attorney General (Unexpired Term Ending January 9, 2011), Vote For 1 DEM Richard Cordray 53,380 56.98% 144,083 52.48% 197,463 53.62% REP Mike Crites 35,900 38.32% 115,398 42.03% 151,298 41.09% Robert M.
    [Show full text]