#2 The Election is only a few days away and I want to weigh in with my worthless prediction before it's over. I live in central NJ and in the course of my job I drive all over Monmouth and Ocean counties. New Jersey has historically been a 'blue state', with voter registration probably running about 3 to 1 Democrat over Republican. Today based on my observation of the visible political paraphernalia with which people make their opinions known, I'd have to say the State is solidly purple, and possibly even a tad magenta, which suggests to me that NJ is going to re-elect the incumbent Republican George W. Bush to be president on November 2nd of 2004.
Lawn signs and bumper stickers are to be found all over the landscape, but in my travels visiting eight home a day six days a week, I have noticed that there are practically no signs for John Kerry on actual lawns. If this sort of `grassroots campaigning' is any indication, it is easily running 8 to 1 in favor of Bush with actual voters.
Let me state that while I have seen a few signs for the Democrat and his running mate John Edwards on lawns of private homes, but the best places to find them are at traffic light intersections, and along highway off ramps, and median strips of roads like Routes 35 thru Middletown, 37 in Toms River, and 195 which runs east/west from Belmar to Trenton where they seem to sprout up like mushrooms.
I see lawns signs for local candidates of both parties. However, if the locals are Democrats there is no sign for a presidential candidate. I also have seen Bush signs on street corners in one-sie two-sies, with one exception. There was a gas station in Belmar that was ringed with dozens of them. When I asked the attendant if he knew who put them up, he said he had done it as instructed by the owner. I plan to patronize this station whenever I can.
Similarly, I have seen a variety of bumper stickers for both candidates and if quantity translates to support Bush is ahead there by a factor of about 20 to 1. The bumper stickers are varied and numerous for Bush. I have seen a myriad of different versions of the basic Bush/Cheney 04 blue rectangle citing `this constituency group for Bush' and `that constituency group for Bush`. But the one I probably see most often is the W04 oval, the same one I have on my own car. Kerry Bumper sticker are few and far between though I have also encountered a variety of them. There is one that sticks out in my mind it appeared to be hand lettered although its possible it was produced on a copier, and it was probably not meant seriously for Kerry but as an attack against him, either way it stated;
"Elitist Windsurfers for Kerry"
The other Kerry bumper sticker phenomenon that I have noticed is tiny circles. If you're a blood donor you'll know that they will sometimes give you a sticker about 3" in diameter that reads "Be nice to me. I gave blood today". You are supposed to wear this on your shirt, or the lapel of your jacket. If you go to a rally for a candidate you will see someone handing out stickers about this same size with the candidates logo on it. Apparently after people go to a rally they remove the sticker from their sweater and put it on their back of their car. This is quite a neat idea except that you have to be right behind someone at a traffic light to be able to read the tiny thing.
Inside the homes I visit as part of my work, (8/day 6 days/week) I keep coming across the Republican elephant. Mostly, the GOP's preeminent pachyderm is incarnated as a refrigerator magnet, and though he is not in every home I visit, if the political affiliation of the home can be determined, its almost always `trunks up`.
I don't believe I have ever seen a Democrat donkey refrigerator magnet. Now, my job again, is to measure kitchens and bathrooms, for new cabinets, and counter tops, and `conventional wisdom' tells us the it is the Republican who are the rich fat cats, so should we assume that the reason why I'm seeing more Republican homes is that this is the sort of home renovation that only Republicans can afford? Well, the company I work for gets its jobs through Home Depot*, and I see homes at every level of the economic scale, and the only times I get the Democrat vibe is when I walk into a home with a huge amazing brand new kitchen, only to be told the customer wants Home Depot to do the cabinets for a laundry room the size of my Master Bedroom. In these homes (and there have been only three that I can think of) I'll overhear the lady of the house on the phone in the next room talking about how unfairly the press is treating Democratic New Jersey Governor James McGreevy. This would suggest that it is the people who can afford better than what the Depot offers that are more likely to be Democrats. It's only a personal observation, and I can't back it with empirical research evidence, but my own experience contradicts `conventional wisdom'.
*Home Depot neither supports nor endorses Droid Bleeps.
Heck I'd be astounded if the ever even found out that it existed.
Posted by apwartrigit
at 11:24 AM EDT
Updated: October 31, 2004 11:38 AM EDT