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Old 04-04-2011, 02:06 PM
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Jeanfromfillmore Jeanfromfillmore is offline
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Default Illegal voters may be tipping the balance of power in America.

Illegal voters may be tipping the balance of power in America.
Americans are getting assaulted on all sides and don't seem to be getting much protection from the government that was set up to protect and defend them back in 1781.

This present government seems to put the protection and defense of its borders against illegal immigration into the background. It seems willing to welcome and tacitly encourage illegal immigration. But most disturbingly, seems to aid and abet, passively and aggressively, their ability to vote illegally in the very elections that keep this government in power.

These actions seem counter-intuitive for a strong country to survive.

If one looks at the close elections around this country, on the local, state and national level, you can see that many of the races were and are very close, some separated by just a few votes.

The House is having a study on the elections systems in our country and just issued the following statement: “We simply cannot have an electoral system that allows thousands of non-citizens to violate the law and vote in our elections. We must do more to protect the integrity of our electoral processes."

Colorado IDENTIFIED 12,000 illegal voters on its rolls and ascertained that 5,000 of them voted in the last election. The Republican Senate candidate was narrowly defeated by the Democrat....But how many illegal voters didn't they identify?

Minnesota saw the election of ultra liberal Senator Al Franken, when he narrowly defeated Norm Coleman by just a few votes. Many claim that a lot of the Franken votes were under suspicious circumstances.

California lost a conservative congressman when his district was flooded with illegal alien votes. He was replaced with liberal Democrat, Loretta Sanchez.

Many states are starting to realize that they have been under assault by illegal voters and are starting to examine their voter requirements. But any changes to I.D. requirements and tightening up security to ensure only U.S. citizens vote, seem to be fought tooth and nail by the Democrats, under the guise of some sort of "rights". Is it a right to vote illegally in our elections?

For instance the Texas legislature just voted to require picture I.D. of voters when they show up at the election booths. You would think it was a sledge hammer blow to "civil rights" when you heard the emotional outbursts from the democrats.

The caterwauling from the left is off the charts and unreasonable when a simple requirement like requiring I.D. to vote in an election is enforced. It is most disturbing to American citizens who hold their right to vote as precious. Americans of all races, creeds and political parties are starting to see through and see the mockery made of our election laws.

As a south Texas legislator just said: "I've had many citizens tell me that they don't believe their vote will count anymore because of the fraud that exists in South Texas"....This is just one state!

It doesn't take much to tip the scales of power. America better wake up and smell the ballots because they are rancid. Time to cleanse our voter rolls.

http://www.irishcentral.com/story/ne...119147294.html
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Old 04-04-2011, 02:06 PM
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Jeanfromfillmore Jeanfromfillmore is offline
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Latino Voters Key to a 2012 Florida Win
From the Cuban-Americans in Miami to the Mexican Americans of California, Latin Americans in the United States now number more than 50-million strong.
"One in six in the United States is Latino. One in four children is Latino," says Gloria Montano-Greene of the National Association of Latino Elected Officials. "This is a great opportunity for the country to be more inclusive of the Latino community in their agenda."According to N.A.L.E.O, "their agenda" is education, economy and immigration, and for Political candidates in 2012, those are the 3 issues--and a growingly powerful demographic--that will have to be addressed.
Both parties have created "Latino outreach" positions in the Sunshine State, to work heavy, Hispanic areas like Miami-Dade County, get more voters registered and, they hope, ensure Latino men and women vote for their candidates.
In 1980, America's Latino population was just under 15 million. Since then, it has more than tripled.
The states with the largest Latino populations are California, with 13 million (37 percent of the state,) Texas, with 9 million (36 percent,) Florida with 4 million (21 percent) and New York, with 3 million (17percent).
Yet of those four states, only Florida is a true swing state, the fourth largest of the nation, with 29 electoral college votes. This makes capturing the majority of the Hispanic vote in the Sunshine State more relevant and more critical to winning in 2012 and beyond.
"The past election here in Florida indicates that if you win Hispanics, you win the general election," says Christopher Mann, a political science professor at the University of Miami.
In November, Republican Marco Rubio became Florida's junior U.S. Senator, pulling 55 percent of the state's Latino vote, but two years before, in 2008, President Obama took Florida, winning 57 percent of the states Latino vote.
Historically, though, Hispanics vote 60 percent of the time for Democrats and 38 percent of the time for Republicans.
That is not to be assumed, though, in 2012 and beyond. Political analysts say the Latino vote is up for whomever best addresses the key concerns of education, economy and immigration.
"Whichever candidate is more successful in avoiding mistakes in appealing to the Hispanic vote, probably wins this state in the 2012 election," says Mann.
So, once again, it may all come down to Florida, and specifically, Florida's Latinos.


Read more: http://politics.blogs.foxnews.com/20...#ixzz1Iad4fkfO
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