Voters want to know that elections will be conducted fairly and accurately.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Polling in a general election is pretty accurate, because turnout is usually high.
Voters tell politicians what they want through the ballot box. Constantly second-guessing them by speculating whether the parties should gang up on each other misses the point.
Voters will decide how they want to be governed.
We must correct the problems and inequities in the way we conduct and decide elections in the United States.
To finalize, the purpose of an election is to hear the will of the people, not to fabricate votes.
We have just been working hard to have people to come out to vote and to make sure people understand how important the election is.
Electoral contests have nothing but polls, which is why people have grown so obsessed with them; we're desperate for an objective rendering of what is happening and what may happen.
They may then be willing to cast principled votes based on an educated understanding of the public interest in the face of polls suggesting that the public itself may have quite a different understanding of where its interest lies.
Elections are rarely perfect.
It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything.