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Survey: stateside 'transplants' on this forum, who live here year-round - did you/do you vote?

(@islandjoan)
Posts: 1798
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

I'm just curious how many who moved from the states and live here year round: did you vote?

Just reply with a yes or no, not looking for justifications either way.

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 2:40 pm
 lc98
(@lc98)
Posts: 1250
Noble Member
 

Yes.

I will say, I waited 10 years before voting here for the first time, because I needed to understand a lot more about who NOT to vote for.

Maybe in another 10 years I will better understand who TO vote for as well!

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 2:49 pm
(@Exit Zero)
Posts: 2265
Noble Member
 

Yes, and in every election since 1978, voted early yesterday.

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 3:15 pm
(@islandjoan)
Posts: 1798
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

thanks fdr and Exit Zero!

I early voted also and it was NUTS on STX! 18 years on STX and I voted every time.

fdr, I understand what you mean....

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 3:39 pm
(@caribstx)
Posts: 546
Honorable Member
 

I've lived here for years and am still waiting for someone worth voting for.

It doesn't matter whose in office here...the outcome is always the same.

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 6:11 pm
(@stxsailor)
Posts: 628
Honorable Member
 

I vote even though the pickings are slim and caribstx is right, same result, different thief. I look at it as voting for the smartest in the special ed class.
A few young faces in though hoping for the best expecting the same.

 
Posted : November 19, 2018 6:56 pm
(@stjohnjulie)
Posts: 1053
Noble Member
 

yes

 
Posted : November 20, 2018 6:50 am
(@ms411)
Posts: 3554
Famed Member
 

I will vote today. Lines too long to early vote.

I am hoping we will one day get a governor that will be transparent. I didn't think we would get that with Mapp so didn't vote for him.

I am somewhat conflicted as to whether transplants should vote here. Maintaining your registration in the States gives you the opportunity to vote for president and voting members in house and Senate. Those votes may have a bigger impact than voting locally because the US controls so much of what happens here and VI registered voters have no say.

 
Posted : November 20, 2018 6:50 am
(@Ca. Dreamers)
Posts: 389
Reputable Member
 

We voted!

 
Posted : November 20, 2018 10:55 am
 JE
(@je)
Posts: 320
Reputable Member
 

We have voted in every local election here since moving here in 2005. And I would argue that our local government I am voting for has more impact on my day to day life than the POTUS or Congress and my vote here in a relatively small pool of voters is more meaningful than it would be in a stateside election with millions of voters. But I do care who is President and recognize we are dependent on the US government for so many things.

 
Posted : November 20, 2018 11:10 am
(@islandjoan)
Posts: 1798
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

(tu) That's how I feel too!

JE wrote:
We have voted in every local election here since moving here in 2005. And I would argue that our local government I am voting for has more impact on my day to day life than the POTUS or Congress and my vote here in a relatively small pool of voters is more meaningful than it would be in a stateside election with millions of voters. But I do care who is President and recognize we are dependent on the US government for so many things.

 
Posted : November 20, 2018 12:35 pm
(@east-ender)
Posts: 5404
Illustrious Member
 

ms411 wrote:
I am somewhat conflicted as to whether transplants should vote here. Maintaining your registration in the States gives you the opportunity to vote for president and voting members in house and Senate. Those votes may have a bigger impact than voting locally because the US controls so much of what happens here and VI registered voters have no say.

Um, you have to be a resident to vote. If you are a resident of the VI, you cannot "maintain your registration" in the states.

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 10:14 am
(@ms411)
Posts: 3554
Famed Member
 

The election system doesn't know if you've moved unless you tell them. If you request absentee ballot, you can vote. Many students vote absentee.

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 10:57 am
Wolverine888
(@wolverine888)
Posts: 226
Estimable Member
 

Ha ha, I tried to. Once I had been here long enough, I got registered 14 Nov which fell between the general election and run-off election and at that time the elections office told me to watch the news because the Attorney General was looking at whether registering between these two events would be legal or not. Some of you may have followed this controversy in the newspapers and on the radio. Then, just last Friday the AG ruled that it would not be allowed after all...so even though they took all my info the first time (photo id, passport, social security card, etc.), registered me and gave me a voter registration card, now I find out I'll have to go back and re-register (I think they said after the 26th Nov, there's some requisite minimum numbers of days after an election) in order to get properly registered and to get the new photo voter registration card. Like I say, I tried, lol

In a related question, does anybody know what percentage of the registered voters voted yesterday? Plus I wonder how many of those eligible to register, haven't even done so? Just curious

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 5:30 pm
(@pilatesgal318)
Posts: 408
Honorable Member
 

Yes

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 7:33 pm
(@east-ender)
Posts: 5404
Illustrious Member
 

ms411 wrote:
The election system doesn't know if you've moved unless you tell them. If you request absentee ballot, you can vote. Many students vote absentee.

Students aren't residents. If this is your residence and you just conveniently forget to tell the system at your old residence you have moved, what does that make you?

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 7:39 pm
(@ms411)
Posts: 3554
Famed Member
 

In my opinion, it depends on where you register, if you register. We still aren't on Real ID and a few other states aren't either. Our latest law says nobody can be removed from rolls.

If you are in an area that allows online registration up until election day, it would seem as though you have a lot of flexibility.

East Ender wrote:

The election system doesn't know if you've moved unless you tell them. If you request absentee ballot, you can vote. Many students vote absentee.

Students aren't residents. If this is your residence and you just conveniently forget to tell the system at your old residence you have moved, what does that make you?

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 8:53 pm
 lc98
(@lc98)
Posts: 1250
Noble Member
 

Wolverine888 wrote:
In a related question, does anybody know what percentage of the registered voters voted yesterday? Plus I wonder how many of those eligible to register, haven't even done so? Just curious

Unofficial results from the run-off election are here. These aren't final, but so far it's about 10% lower turnout than the Nov 6 election. Anecdotally, I have heard many people requested absentee ballots and/or e-mail ballots that never received them, so I bet it would be higher if everyone who wanted a ballot had been able to vote.

https://www.vivote.gov/sites/default/files/unofficialresults/ElecNight.HTM

 
Posted : November 21, 2018 10:27 pm
(@stjohnjulie)
Posts: 1053
Noble Member
 

I had read that there were more than 51,000 registered voters in the territory. I think there are a couple of articles about the general election early voting numbers that have the breakdowns. I was curious when I saw those numbers how many of those registered voters are still residents of the territory. Just found this: The Source that has the figures from the general election.

 
Posted : November 22, 2018 7:46 am
(@speee1dy)
Posts: 8867
Illustrious Member
 

you can get real id here. its 75 extra and takes about a month to get to you.

what i was told byt the lady at the dmv

ms411 wrote:
In my opinion, it depends on where you register, if you register. We still aren't on Real ID and a few other states aren't either. Our latest law says nobody can be removed from rolls.

If you are in an area that allows online registration up until election day, it would seem as though you have a lot of flexibility.

The election system doesn't know if you've moved unless you tell them. If you request absentee ballot, you can vote. Many students vote absentee.

Students aren't residents. If this is your residence and you just conveniently forget to tell the system at your old residence you have moved, what does that make you?

 
Posted : November 22, 2018 10:42 am
(@aschultz)
Posts: 254
Reputable Member
 

I would have to pay taxes in California if I still wanted to vote. Not worth it!!

 
Posted : November 24, 2018 1:31 am
(@lily1025)
Posts: 446
Honorable Member
 

absolutely! every year since we moved here,even when the pickings were real slim [this past election perhaps?]

 
Posted : November 25, 2018 10:59 pm
(@stxsailor)
Posts: 628
Honorable Member
 

"absolutely! every year since we moved here,even when the pickings were real slim [this past election perhaps?"

Pickings are always slim. you are basically picked the best out a special ed class.

 
Posted : November 26, 2018 2:30 pm
(@TommySTX)
Posts: 220
Estimable Member
 

East Ender wrote:

The election system doesn't know if you've moved unless you tell them. If you request absentee ballot, you can vote. Many students vote absentee.

Students aren't residents. If this is your residence and you just conveniently forget to tell the system at your old residence you have moved, what does that make you?

I'm with you on this one. I hate that we can't vote for POTUS but to "forget" to tell your old home that you moved and continue to vote there, then that is basically voter fraud. If you are a full time resident of the USVI then that is where you vote.

 
Posted : November 28, 2018 3:31 pm
(@stxsailor)
Posts: 628
Honorable Member
 

The VI voter is generally uninformed and olny votes for best party given or friend. Do we really want that mentality voting for the POTUS?

 
Posted : November 28, 2018 3:36 pm
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