Tag Archives: people-on-staff

Registration Dates Every Black Voter Needs To Know Before Election Day

See the rest here:

E lection Day, Nov. 6, is rapidly approaching, and deadlines to register are even closer. High Black voter turnout will be instrumental for Democrats to retake Congress, as well as gubernatorial races in Florida, Maryland, and Georgia—three states where Black candidates could make history. See Also: Michelle Obama Warns That ‘Other Folks’ Still Show Up At The Polls If We Don’t A state-by-state guide to voter registration deadlines https://t.co/xIbpnlgpG2 pic.twitter.com/0eJz4ji5JJ — The New York Times (@nytimes) October 18, 2016 Deadlines to register have passed in Alaska and Rhode Island, and some states don’t allow online registration. Here is a list of upcoming deadlines in the other states and the District of Columbia:   Alabama : In person, online or by mail is Oct. 22.   Arizona : In person, online or by mail is Oct. 9.   Arkansas : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 9.   California : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 22.   Colorado : Mail or online deadline is Oct. 29. In-person registration is permitted up to Election Day.   Connecticut : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 30.   Delaware : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 13.   District of Columbia : Mail or online deadline is Oct. 16. In-person registration is permitted until Election Day.   Florida : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   Georgia : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   Hawaii : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9. In-person registration is permitted until Election Day.   Idaho : Mail or online deadline is Oct. 12. In-person registration is permitted until Election Day.   Illinois : In-person deadline is Oct. 9. Online deadline is Oct. 21. Registration continues during a “grace period” at local election offices.   Indiana : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   Iowa : Online deadline is Oct. 27 and mail on Oct. 22. In-person registration is permitted until Election Day.   Kansas : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 16.   Kentucky : In person, online or mail deadline is Oct. 9.   Louisiana : In-person or mail deadline is Oct. 9. Online registration continues through Oct. 16.   Maine : Mail deadline is Oct. 16. In-person registration is permitted through Election Day.   Maryland : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 16.   Massachusetts : Mail deadline is Oct. 16. In-person or online deadline is Oct. 17.   Michigan : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 9.   Minnesota : Online or by mail deadline is Oct. 16. In-person registration is permitted through Election Day.   Mississippi : In-person deadline is Oct. 8 and by mail on Oct. 9.   Missouri : By mail, in-person or online deadline is Oct. 10.   Montana : In-person deadline was Oct. 7—however, late in-person registration is available, but only at county election offices through Election Day. Mailed forms must be received by Oct. 10.   Nebraska : By mail or online deadline is Oct. 19. In person continues through Oct. 26.   Nevada : By mail deadline is Oct. 9, in person on Oct. 16 and Oct. 18 for online registration.   New Hampshire : In person continues through Election Day. Mailed forms must be received by Oct. 27.   New Jersey : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 16.   New Mexico : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   New York : In-person or online deadline is Oct. 12. Mailed forms must be received by Oct. 17.   North Carolina : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 12. ( 28 counties affected by Hurricane Florence have an extension to Oct. 15.) From Oct. 17 to Nov. 3, residents can register and vote simultaneously at early voting sites.   North Dakota : Voters are not required to register before Election Day but must present an ID at the polls.   Ohio : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   Oklahoma : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 12.   Oregon : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 16.   Pennsylvania : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 9.   South Carolina : In-person, by mail or online is Oct. 17.   South Dakota : In-person deadline is Oct. 22. Mailed forms must be received by Oct. 22.   Tennessee : In-person, by mail or online deadline is Oct. 9.   Texas : In-person or by mail deadline is Oct. 9.   Utah : By mail deadline is Oct. 9. In-person or online deadline is Oct. 30.   Vermont : Online or in person permitted through Election Day.   Virginia : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 15.   Washington : Online or by mail deadline is Oct. 8. In-person deadline is Oct. 29.   West Virginia : In-person, online or by mail deadline is Oct. 16.   Wisconsin : Online or by mail deadline is Oct. 17. In person permitted through Election Day.   Wyoming : In person permitted through Election Day. Mailed forms must be received by Oct. 22.   SEE ALSO: Disgusting! Officer Who Killed Tamir Rice Rehired As A Cop: He Deserves A Second Chace The Sunken Place Unites! Ben Carson, Candace Owens And Stacey Dash Speaking At A Black Leadership Summit [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3829110″ overlay=”true”]

Registration Dates Every Black Voter Needs To Know Before Election Day

Political Outlet ‘The Hill’ Doesn’t Know The Difference Between Susan Rice And Condoleezza Rice

Read more here:

Y ep, all Black folks look alike according to media sources from  Fox News to The Hill. The Hill, a popular political outlet since 1994, covered Susan Rice , Obama’s former National Security Advisor, who is considering running against Maine GOP Sen. Susan Collins for the U.S. Senate. Collins voted for  Brett Kavanaugh  on the Supreme Court and has received tons of backlash because she is a woman who voted against a woman who was sexually assaulted. While covering the story, The Hill used a photo of Condoleezza Rice , who was Secretary of State under President  George W. Bush . See Also: President Donald Trump’s Voter Fraud Claims Could Lead To More Voter Suppression The Hill’s headline read, “Susan Rice says she has been ‘moved by the enthusiasm’ for her possible Senate run.” See below: Damn, y'all. For real?? @thehill pic.twitter.com/lnyFdApAf0 — Michael Eaves (@michaeleaves) October 8, 2018 The image has already been changed on their article . However, Twitter is having a field day with this. One user wrote , “somebody googled ‘Black Rice’ Condeleeza’s picture came up.” Another tweeted , “Don’t they have fact checkers, or editors, or I dunno, any Black people on staff over there?” Maybe this will further inspire Susan Rice to run against Collins. In case you missed it, Obama’s former White House Communications Director Jen Psaki tweeted, “who wants to run for Senate in Maine? there will be an army of supporters with you.” Rice replied, “Me.” Me https://t.co/93qNxN7Ky9 — Susan Rice (@AmbassadorRice) October 5, 2018 Don’t get too excited. According to ABC News , Rice spoke at a panel during The New Yorker Festival and said, “I made the tweet, I later elaborated that this wasn’t where my head was.” She continued, “But I have been moved by the enthusiasm. I’m going to give it due consideration after the midterms.” Nonetheless, The Hill, Fox News and everyone else who think all Black folks look alike need to do better. SEE ALSO: Meet Jogger Joe, The Man Who Took Racist Cue From BBQ Becky In Tossing Homeless Man’s Clothes Trump-Supporting DA Calls ‘Ghetto’ Maxine Waters A ‘Bitch,’ Can’t Believe She Hasn’t Been Shot This Colin Kaepernick Retweet Says Everything You Need To Know About The NFL Players’ Anthem Grievance [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3785430″ overlay=”true”]

Political Outlet ‘The Hill’ Doesn’t Know The Difference Between Susan Rice And Condoleezza Rice

Beyonce And Jay-Z: Experts Break Down Baby Rumors

How did B and Jay go unnoticed at the hospital? Why are there so many incorrect reports? Celeb experts explain. By Jocelyn Vena Jay-Z and Beyonce Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage In the days leading up to little Blue Ivy’s birth, Beyonc