Archive for November 4th, 2008

Barack Obama Wins The US Presidency!

Will become the 44th President of the United States of America
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Yes, We Did! Senator Barack Obama, by most projections, has successfully won the 2008 Presidential campaign and has been elected as the 44th President of the United States of America. I gotta tell ya, and this his the God’s honest truth, I never imagined that the US would elect an African American President in my lifetime. I cannot express … truly … cannot express the immense sense of pride and genuine happiness that Senator Barack Obama has won the White House:


CNN projects that Barack Obama will be the nation’s 44th president. As polls closed on the West coast, the Illinois senator was projected to receive enough electoral votes to pass the 270-vote threshold. Obama is projected to win California, Washington, Oregon and Hawaii. He also is projected to win Virginia, a state that hasn’t voted for a Democratic president since 1964. As Obama built up a commanding lead over Sen. John McCain, senior aides to the Arizona senator were growing pessimistic about his chances. When asked if they saw a path to victory, two senior McCain aides said no.

Here are a few pics from Grant Park in Chicago, IL were the Obama Victory party will be raging all night long:


A few times over the past few weeks I’ve let myself wonder what it would be like to have the Obamas as the First Family and … it’s an amazingly exciting thing to look forward to now. Michelle Obama, as David likes to say, will be the new Jackie O. But the real winner here is America. We have finally decided, as a Nation, to move beyond racial bounds and elect the right person to lead our Country thru these perilous times. I’m literally swelling with pride and happiness. This is a moment that I will remember for the rest of my life. Much love and congrats go out to President-elect Barack Obama! You’ve got a lot of work ahead of you … but I’m confident that you’ll be able to lead our Country toward an amazing new future.

I hope to update this post with video of President-elect Obama’s victory speech … stay tuned! After the jump, watch the full video of President-elect Barack Obama’s Victory Speech tonight …

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Track The Election Day Results

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

CNN and MSNBC have made available widgets that will be updated in real time as soon as polls close and information on results becomes available. If you cannot be near a TV this evening/night, these widgets will provide the pertinent results information as they become available. I will be Twittering thruout the day, evening, night … which will hopefully be a good one for my candidate ;)



Additionally, I will be uploading all of the I Voted photos that folks have been sending in to me thruout the day — like this adorable photo of little Daniel wearing his mother’s sticker on his cheek:


You can click HERE to see the I Voted photo album of my friends and beloved Pink readers (click HERE to see a slideshow of this album, click HERE for the album’s RSS feed). Send in your pics to pinkisthenewblog@gmail.com to have your photo added to the album!

UPDATE: I just uploaded the 100th photo sent in by friends and Pink readers proudly showing off their I Voted stickers after they voted today! Woot! Keep ‘em coming … West Coasters, I know y’all still have a lot of time to vote!!!

I Voted!

The TV Guide
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Earlier this morning I got up early and made my way to my polling place in order to cast my vote today. Because my polling venue is only 2 blocks away, I was able to walk to my polling place this morning. To be honest, I did not anticipate finding a line there. This is the third time I voted at my LA address and it was my experience that folks meandered in to vote thruout the day, never causing much of a line at any given time. This morning, I was met with a line of folks that stretched into the parking lot and out near the street. It was a very cool thing to see. Here are a few pics that I snapped of my voting experience this morning:


As you can see, I proudly cast my ballot for Barack Obama for President and I voted NO on Prop 8. So as not to unduly influence any other voters in the room, I wore a hoodie over my SuperObama t-shirt up until I voted and then happily affixed my I Voted sticker on my shirt as I walked home. It was an amazing feeling, y’all. I was able to campaign and vote for President Bill Clinton (’92, ‘96), Vice President Al Gore (’00) and Senator John Kerry (’04). I’ve voted in Michigan, Oklahoma (which is tough for a Democrat … my lurve goes out to the OKie Dems out there) and now California. I am so pleased with the level of enthusiasm that I’m seeing all over the place — not just on TV but in person. Democracy at it’s greatest.

I’m asking all Pink readers to send in photos of your I Voted stickers once you vote today. If your polling place does not have them (David’s precinct in NYC did not have them when he voted earlier), feel free to make one of your own … email your photos to pinkisthenewblog@gmail.com and I will post as many of them as I can on the site.

Make sure you know when your polling place closes. DO NOT BE FOOLED if someone tells you that voting has been extended to tomorrow. TODAY IS THE ONLY DAY TO VOTE! The first polls close in just under 4 hours, make sure you know where you need to be and what time they close AND VOTE!!! Click HERE for polling information if you’re still unsure where to go.

Les News, 110408

The Hudson family laid to rest, Justin Long downgrades, Good Charlotte get remixed, DON'T FORGET TO VOTE TODAY
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

The Obamas & McCains Cast Their Ballots

The Big Day
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

I gotta tell y’all, I’m having a hard time focusing on anything other than Election Day today. After much contemplation while waiting in line to vote this morning (1 1/2 hours), I’ve decided to chill on the goss and focus primarily on what is going on in the US today. I have never experienced such a feeling of excitement in my country before. While I understand that some of y’all may be sick and tired of all the election talk of the last few days, weeks, months I just can’t get fully into goss mode today. I’m really hoping for record voter turn-out in today’s election so I’m gonna try and do anything I can to inspire folks here in the US to GET OUT AND VOTE. I’ll put up some regular stuff thruout the day but I’m entirely too preoccupied with the election to really focus.

Senators Barack Obama and John MCain (and their wives Michelle and Cindy) made their way out to their polling places this morning to cast their ballots in today’s very important election. The assumption is that each man and his wife did not vote for the other guy but … I guess we can’t be entirely too sure. Here are a few pics of the Obamas and the McCains casting their votes earlier today:


Democrat Barack Obama joined the nation’s earliest voters Tuesday as people around the nation began lining up to cast ballots in a historic election pitting Republican John McCain against the man seeking to become the first black president in U.S. history. “I voted,” Obama said, holding up the validation slip he was handed after turning in a ballot at his Chicago neighborhood’s precinct. Accompanying the Illinois senator for the trip from their home to the polling station were his wife, Michelle, and their two young daughters. He planned a final campaign event in nearby Indiana before speaking to a massive evening rally in Chicago. In Delaware, Democratic vice presidential candidate Joe Biden went to the polls with his elderly mother.


Senator McCain gave a thumbs up sign but ignored questions from reporters as he left the polling station in Phoenix, Arizona. Meanwhile, Sarah Palin told journalists in her home town of Wasilla, Alaska, that she hoped to wake up on Wednesday as the new Vice President of the United States. “We have an optimistic and confident view of what is going to happen today,” she said.

Well, the candidates at least have a couple votes each that they can count in their tally. As the rest of the country votes thru out the day (the first polls close in just 5 hours) the US and the world waits with bated breath.

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Exercise Your Right To Vote

"Vote your hopes, not your fears"
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Today is Election Day here in the US and altho many States have allowed their citizens the ability to vote early, the first Tuesday in November of a Presidential Election Year is the official Election Day. At 12AM ET, the small hamlet of Dixville Notch, New Hampshire was the “first in the nation” to open their polls and allow their citizens to vote. Because of the small number of voters there, the results were made known mere moments after the voting opened. Altho Dixville Notch is traditionally heavily Repbulican the Democratic nominee, Senator Barack Obama, won by a landslide … at least by Dixville Notch standards:


Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama emerged victorious in the first election returns of the 2008 presidential race, winning 15 of 21 votes cast in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire. People in the village in New Hampshire’s northeast corner voted just after midnight Tuesday. It was the first time since 1968 that the village leaned Democratic in an election. Obama’s rival, Republican John McCain, won 6 votes. A full 100 percent of registered voters in the village cast ballots. And the votes didn’t take long to tally. The town, home to around 75 residents, has opened its polls shortly after midnight each Election Day since 1960, drawing national media attention for being the first place in the country to make its presidential preferences known … The result in Dixville Notch is hardly a reliable bellwether for the eventual winner of the White House — or even the result statewide. While New Hampshire is a perennial swing state, with 4 Electoral College votes at stake, Dixville Notch consistently leans Republican. The last Democrat it picked was Hubert Humphrey over Richard Nixon in 1968.

I am so impressed that this small section of the State of New Hampshire takes such pride in voting. They are a true testament to the spirit of the electoral process here in the US. If only the rest of the country would follow suit.

That said, I think this year’s election will prove that more people (possibly than ever, surely than the last few elections) are interested in participating in the electoral process by casting their votes. Already we’ve heard of people waiting up to 10 hours in line to cast their early votes in this election. As a student of Political Science, it’s is a great treat for me to watch the way this election has unfolded over the past (almost) 2 years. While I would never tell anyone how to vote, I feel it incumbent to express who I am supporting in this presidential election because of the historical implications — whoever wins — of this year’s election. Anyone familiar with my site must know by now that I am proudly casting my vote for Senator Barack Obama:


I have been a life-long Democrat ever since turning 18 years old and learning what each of the major Political Parties stand for. I find that my social beliefs fall in line with the Party Platform of the Democratic Party and am happy to cast my vote in that manner. But this year is different … this year, the Dems have nominated a man who sparks such enthusiasm in me, such an exciting feeling of inclusion and hope that, indeed, it is the man himself who has won my vote, not just his Political Party. We Americans enjoy such a privilege to vote in this country that it is criminal to take that right for granted. But I can understand the feeling some voters have to either vote against someone or to not care at all. So many folks have been disenfranchised for so many years, as sad as it is to say … I can absolutely understand why some people do not feel they can be a part of the political process. Senator Barack Obama is a man to believe in — to want to vote for. It’s not a matter of voting against his opponent, it’s a matter of voting for this man who I honestly believe will lead our country into a hopeful and prosperous future. I am wholly confident that Barack Obama will be the President that our country desperately needs right now. Since the first time I heard it, I vividly recall a particular line from Michelle Obama’s keynote speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, CO this past Summer. Michelle urged voters to “vote their hopes, not their fears” and I can’t think of a more appropriate way to explain why I am choosing to vote Barack Obama for President of the United States of America.

Again, I am not telling anyone how to vote, nor am I trying to convince anyone that they should vote my way … I am merely so excited to get to my polling place and wait however long it will take to get my turn and cast my ballot for Barack Obama. I cannot express my excitement over this election. The winds of change are blowing and the US is on the verge of a new future. It’s an exciting time to be an American. We are so close to so much hopeful promise … the feeling is electric. I urge all Americans to get out and VOTE. Have your say, be a part of history and do your civic duty. As citizens, you owe it to your country … but, perhaps more importantly, you owe it to yourselves.

Please, if you have the time and inclination, send me a photo of yourself, family members and/or friends proudly wearing your I Voted stickers and I will happily post them on the site this week. Email your photos to pinkisthenewblog@gmail.com AND VOTE, Y’ALL!!!!!!!

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