Jason Carter, the former president's grandson, recently told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that his grandfather hopes to live long enough to cast his vote in this year’s presidential election.

“I'm only trying to make it to vote for Kamala Harris,” President Carter reportedly told loved ones

lmao they're keeping this fossil on life support just so he can vote

Early voting in Georgia, where Carter lives, opens on Oct. 15 for the Nov. 5 election, and absentee ballots are sent out up to 29 days before the election. Georgia does not have any laws prohibiting a ballot from being counted if someone dies between the early voting period and Election Day.

michael-laugh

just two more weeks, buddy! you can do it! i-cant

  • anarcho_blinkenist [none/use name]
    ·
    2 months ago

    honestly I'd write them in regardless

    democracy-manifest spoil me mfs --- "democratic" party my ass; you can't bully me! (or green party I guess but I'm petty)

    • MattsAlt [comrade/them]
      ·
      2 months ago

      Yea I have write in but they said no votes will count for PSL, so I guess I'll do green just to voice my anti genocide position

      • g_g [she/her, comrade/them]
        hexagon
        ·
        2 months ago

        no votes will count for PSL

        now that's what i call democracy!

        in bad country they hold sham elections where you're only allowed to vote for the government approved candidate

          • anarcho_blinkenist [none/use name]
            ·
            edit-2
            2 months ago

            yeah, and even that comes from blatant (and in some cases deliberate) lack of understanding of democratic centralism and the CPC's democratic centralist system as I understand it. Westerners see the final external result of the end-process as "only one candidate and ~100% votes for them, such totalitarianism!" in total ignorance that the actual nomination itself is the democratic electoral process, where the putting forth of candidates, and vociferous internal debate and voicing opposition takes place in the Central Committee (who are in turn themselves elected by the National Congress in plenary sessions) --- and where once the will of the majority of the CC is decided for who gets the nomination, then that is the party line to be carried out along the lines of the principles of democratic centralism.

            And so the end-process bit the westerners see and are talking about as an "only one candidate 'election'" is essentially just the subsequent vote-of-confidence and ratification of the process and results by the CC and National Congress --- ie. a confirmation by the relevant Party bodies that proper procedure was followed, and the people officially elevated for the candidacy were actually the people the majority of the CC voted to nominate for that position, without post-hoc substitutions or other chicanery.