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Indybay Feature

Every Waking Moment Counts on Election Day

by Paul Hogarth, Beyond Chron (reposted)
Remember Supervisor Michael Yaki? He lost re-election in December 2000, when the return of district elections ushered in a new generation of progressive leadership in San Francisco. On the Sunday night before his defeat, Yaki was dining at a restaurant in Nob Hill when he ran into State Senator John Burton. “What are you doing here?” yelled Burton. “You should be out in your District campaigning.” On Election Night, Yaki was so confident about getting re-elected that he and his wife went out to see a movie. When they walked out of the theater, he had lost to Jake McGoldrick by only 600 votes. Today is Election Day, and if politicians are wise, they should not waste a single precious moment before the polls close at 8:00 p.m. For their own political future, and if they care about democracy, they should be out in the streets talking to every possible voter and getting them out to the polls.
In our “winner-take-all” system of government, election results matter a great deal because they affect who will make the crucial decisions over the next two years. Even if a candidate barely wins or barely loses, nobody will remember what the margin was years later – which is why getting out the vote on the very last day is so important. In 2000, Supervisor Mabel Teng was so sure that she was going to win re-election that on Election Day she got her nails and hair done, went to the annual Election Day luncheon sponsored by Bob McCarthy, and went to Starbucks. She did spend part of the day shaking hands with constituents and passing out literature – but clearly that was not enough. She lost to Tony Hall by 39 votes. If Teng had spent the whole day talking to voters, or targeting identified supporters and making sure that they made it to the polling place, she could have possibly reached at least 40 more people.

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http://www.beyondchron.org/news/index.php?itemid=3877#more
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Aaron Aarons
Tue, Nov 7, 2006 1:49PM
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