First day of early voting brings in 5,000+ Brazos County voters

First day of early voting brings in 5,000+ Brazos County voters

BRYAN, Texas (KBTX) – Monday was the first day of early voting in Texas, and 5,144 people have already cast their vote in Brazos county for the current election.

Trudy Hancock, elections administrator for Brazos County, told KBTX this election is already bucking trends.

“We have hit the ground running today,” Hancock boasted. “We usually run 50/50. 50% early and 50% election day. I have a feeling this time, a lot of people are going to vote early.”

Thousands of people have already cast their vote in the Brazos Valley on day one of early voting.(kbtx)

As far as first-day jitters, Hancock said it was a smooth day of voting.

“We’ve had a few little technical issues like ballot paper getting jammed and things like that, but nothing to halt voting,” explained Hancock.

Bryan native Jeremy Zamora said he was eager to cast his vote.

“I think it’s important, as an American citizen, to do your due diligence as your right to vote and have your voice be heard,” Zamora shared.

Hancock said it was a large turnout today, and areas like Robertson County are experiencing the same influx of voters with the same amount of foot traffic in a day as it would in a week.

“Just remember, once you’re in that line, you’re within that 100-foot marker, so there is no electioneering. No shirts, buttons, hats for candidates; just be sure that you’re mindful of that,” advised Hancock.

A total of 5,144 people in Brazos county cast their ballot on day one of early voting.
A total of 5,144 people in Brazos county cast their ballot on day one of early voting.(kbtx)

Although lines were a little long on day one, Zamora said election workers quickly and efficiently kept voters moving.

“Do your due diligence of who you want in the office and running the country,” Zamora added.

For those not voting in person but nervous about their ballots being received due to post office issues, Hancock has a pro tip.

“If you’re worried about the post office, your ballot having to go out of town and then come back, you can go to the post office on Boonville and walk your ballot in. They will hand stamp it and put it in a box, and they deliver them to us daily,” suggested Hancock.

A mail-in ballot must be postmarked no later than 7 p.m. on Election Day, Nov. 5 and received by 5 p.m. the following day. That may be a tight turnaround, so Hancock advises all to send out your ballot as early as possible.

Find more information on local election information with KBTX’s Election Headquarters. Early voting runs through November 1.


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On CT’s first early voting day, Lamont finds long lines in Greenwich

On CT’s first early voting day, Lamont finds long lines in Greenwich

Turnout was heavy Monday morning in the first hours of early voting in Connecticut, as a surprised Gov. Ned Lamont discovered when he arrived at Greenwich town hall to cast a ballot.

“I think I’m going to vote another day. There’s a half-hour line here, which I appreciate. People are taking their votes seriously,” Lamont said. Peering at the line, he smiled and added, “I think it’s popular.”


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Republican election denier Tina Peters sentenced to 9 years in prison for voting data scheme

A judge ripped into a Colorado county clerk for her crimes and lies before sentencing her Thursday to nine years behind bars for a data-breach scheme spawned from the rampant false claims about voting machine fraud in the 2020 presidential race.

District Judge Matthew Barrett told former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters — after earlier sparring with her for continuing to press discredited claims about rigged voting machines — that she never took her job seriously.

“I am convinced you would do it all over again if you could. You’re as defiant as any defendant this court has ever seen,” Barrett told her in handing down the sentence. “You are no hero. You abused your position and you’re a charlatan.”

Jurors found Peters guilty in August for allowing a man to misuse a security card to access to the Mesa County election system and for being deceptive about that person’s identity.

The man was affiliated with My Pillow chief executive Mike Lindell, a prominent promoter of false claims that voting machines were manipulated to steal the election from former President Donald Trump. The discredited claims trace back to Trump himself, whose supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol because of them and who still hints at them in his third run for president.

READ MORE: Voting experts warn of ‘serious threats’ for 2024 from election equipment software breaches

At trial, prosecutors said Peters, a Republican, was seeking fame and became “fixated” on voting problems after becoming involved with those who had questioned the accuracy of the presidential election results.

A one-time hero to election deniers, Peters has been unapologetic about what happened.

Before being sentenced, Peters insisted that everything she did to try to unroot what she believed was fraud was for the greater good.

“I’ve never done anything with malice to break the law. I’ve only wanted to serve the people of Mesa County,” she told the court.

When Peters pressed on with claims no legal authority has corroborated about “wireless devices” and fraud software in voting machines, however, she drew the judge’s exasperation. Ballot recounts showed no discrepancies, he pointed out.

“I’ve let you go on enough about this,” Judge Barrett said. “The votes are the votes.”

Later, the judge noted that Peters has kept up public appearances in broadcasts to sympathetic audiences for her own benefit.

“It’s just more lies. No objective person believes them. No, at the end of the day, you cared about the jets, the podcasts and people fawning over you,” Barrett said.

Peters had the right to be defiant, he noted, but it was “certainly not helpful for her lot today.”

The breach led by Peters heightened concerns that rogue election workers sympathetic to partisan lies could use their access and knowledge to attack voting processes from within.

It’s impossible to overestimate the damage Peters has done to other election workers in Colorado and elsewhere, Colorado County Clerks Association director Matt Crane told the court.

“In a real and specific way, her actions have led directly to death threats and general threats to the lives and the families of the people who work in our elections,” Crane said. “She has willingly aided individuals in our country who believe that violence is a way to make a point. She has knowingly fueled a fire within others who choose threats as a means to get their way.”

He, his wife and his children have been among those threatened, Crane said.

In Mesa County — a scenic, mostly rural area on the Colorado Western Slope known for its peaches, vineyards and mountain biking as well as oil and gas drilling — Peters’ actions have cost the local government $1.4 million in legal fees and lost employee time, County Commissioner Cody Davis estimated at the sentencing hearing.

Also Peters’ notoriety has incurred “unseen costs” for the area, Davis told the court.

“We have a lot of pride in this community but our reputation has taken a hit,” Davis said. “Her behavior has made this county a national laughingstock.”

Peters was convicted of three counts of attempting to influence a public servant, one count of conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation, first-degree official misconduct, violation of duty and failing to comply with the secretary of state.

She was found not guilty of identity theft, one count of conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation and one count of criminal impersonation. Yet she persisted on social media to accuse Colorado-based Dominion Voting Systems, which made her county’s election system, and others of stealing votes.

Colorado won’t allow anyone to threaten its elections, Secretary of State Jena Griswold said in a statement in response to Peters’ sentencing.

“Colorado’s elections are the nation’s gold standard. I am proud of how we have responded to the first insider elections breach in the nation and look forward to another secure and successful election in November,” Griswold said.

Attorney General Phil Weiser in a statement called the sentence “fair and just.”


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Fat Bear Week.

Voting begins for Alaska’s Fat Bear Week after one contestant was killed in an attack

Voting in Katmai National Park’s famed Fat Bear Week was underway Wednesday after a bear killed one of this year’s competitors and delayed the bracket reveal by a day.

Bear #469 attacked and killed bear #402 on Monday morning at Brooks River in the Alaska park, the National Park Service said in a release, pushing Monday’s bracket reveal to Tuesday.

The attack and the subsequent killing were captured live on webcams that have been set up in the park to follow the bears all summer. The nonprofit organization explore.org, which hosts and broadcasts the bear livestreams, held a live conversation Monday to discuss the attack.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the incident.

Bear #402 in Katmai National Park. The bear was killed Monday in an attack.K. Moore / Katmai National Park via Reuters

“National parks like Katmai protect not only the wonders of nature, but also the harsh realities,” spokesperson Matt Johnson said in the park service release. “Each bear seen on the webcams is competing with others to survive.”

Bear #469 was not included in the bracket, released Tuesday.

How Fat Bear Week works

Fat Bear Week, which the park service calls “an annual celebration of success,” puts 12 bears in the Alaskan Peninsula to the test before they head into hibernation for the winter.

Voting takes place over seven days, culminating in Fat Bear Tuesday, when one bear is crowned the fattest of the season.

“People may vote using any criteria they see fit,” the National Park Service said. “In the end, one bear will reign supreme.”

Explore.org encourages voters to “vote for the bear you believe best exemplifies fatness and success in brown bears.”

“Fat equals survival” for bears, who head into their dens for months without any food and could lose up to one-third of their body weight during that time, the park service said. Surviving hibernation means bulking up on a year’s worth of salmon and other snacks in only six months.

Large male brown bears can weigh up to 1,500 pounds in coastal areas or up to 500 pounds in interior areas, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and they can be 30% to 50% larger than female brown bears.

They weigh the least when they leave hibernation in the spring and can increase their weight by more than 50% by the time they re-enter the den in the fall.

The fat bears of 2024

This year’s contest pits eight bears against one another in the first round of the single-elimination bracket. Voting began Wednesday and will continue Thursday.

Four more bears earned a bye to the second round of voting Friday and Saturday.

In round one, Bear #909 Jr., who won this year’s junior contest, bested Bear #519, a female recently independent from her family. Bear #909 Jr. will now try to beat Bear #128, also known as Grazer, a mother bear who holds last year’s Fat Bear title.

Grazer is described as one of the “most formidable, successful, and adaptable bears” at Brooks River, according to the park service. In July, both of her cubs were “swept over Brooks Falls” toward Bear #32, also known as Chunk, who attacked and injured one of them before Grazer could come to their rescue.

The injured cub died later, and the surviving cub competed in Fat Bear Junior 2024, according to the park service.

Chunk, who the park service said is the “most dominant bear on the Brooks River,” has a bye and will face the winner of the Thursday matchup between Bear #856, a very large adult male who is one of the biggest on the river, and Bear #504, a mother bear and newcomer to the competition.

In another round one faceoff, Bear #903, a smaller male and another Fat Bear Week newbie, beat Bear #909, the mother of the junior contest’s winner. He will go head-to-head with Bear #747, a two-time Fat Bear Week victor so large he was named after an airplane and was once estimated to weigh 1,400 pounds.

The final round one matchup is between Bear #151, a large adult male nicknamed Walker” and Bear #901, a female who returned to the river alone after her first litter of cubs did not survive. The winner will move on to round two to meet Bear #164, a male who has grown a lot in the last few years, now appearing about as tall and as long as Bear #747.

Voting concludes Tuesday, and the fattest bear will be declared the winner.


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Former US Rep. Liz Cheney says she’s voting for Kamala Harris • Oregon Capital Chronicle

Former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney used her trip to the battleground state of North Carolina to announce she is voting for Vice President Kamala Harris.

“Donald Trump cannot be trusted with the power of the presidency,” Cheney said during a lecture at Duke University on Wednesday called “Defending Democracy.”

“I don’t believe that we have the luxury of writing in candidates’ names, particularly in swing states,” she said.

“As a conservative, as someone who believes in and cares about the Constitution, I have thought deeply about this. And because of the danger that Donald Trump poses, not only am I not voting for Donald Trump, but I will be voting for Kamala Harris.”

Cheney is a staunch conservative and was previously a member of the U.S. House Republican leadership. She was kicked out of her leadership post when she rejected Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen.

She was vice-chairwoman of the House panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection and former President Donald Trump’s role in it. She was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump for inciting the insurrection. Cheney paid the price for opposing Trump. She lost her Wyoming primary in 2022 to a Trump-backed challenger.

Cheney, whose father Dick Cheney served from 2001 to 2009 as vice president in the administration of Republican President George W. Bush, has vowed to “do whatever it takes” to make sure Trump loses this election.

Harris’s campaign has been highlighting the support she’s received from Republicans. The campaign has launched state Republicans for Harris groups. Republican speakers were featured at the Democratic National Convention.

The campaign had been courting Cheney’s endorsement, the New York Times reported.

Cheney said Wednesday that she wants people to commit themselves to remembering that Trump watched the riot at the Capitol unfold on television and rejected pleas to call off the mob.

“He watched people assault our Capitol in his name,” she said. “He sat there as members of his family, as members of his staff, pleaded with him to tell the mob to stop. They pleaded with him. He wouldn’t do it,” she said. Instead, Trump “poured gasoline on the fire,” she said, with a Tweet saying Vice President Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what needed to be done.

Trump was pressuring Pence to overturn his election defeat.

Cheney said it is important to defeat election deniers.

“It’s not just Donald Trump,” she said. “Here in North Carolina, it means defeating the Republican candidate for governor. Defeating the Republican candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction.”

Trump has endorsed Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson for governor.

After the Jan. 6 riot, Republican candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction Michele Morrow recorded a video calling for Trump to “put the Constitution to the side” as she advocated for a military coup to keep Trump in power, CNN has reported. Morrow was at the Capitol on Jan. 6, but CNN found no evidence that she entered the building.

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Sen. Bernie Sanders: We need an economy that works for all of us, not just billionaires

Bernie Sanders DNC speech contrast to Harris on liberal policies

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., spent his primetime appearance at Tuesday night’s Democratic National Convention laying out his own policy priorities — even ones that he knows diverge from Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign platform.

“We need to join the rest of the industrialized world and guarantee health care to all people as a human right, not a privilege,” Sanders said, doubling down on his longstanding support for a Medicare for All program.

The Independent senator running for reelection in Vermont was well aware that Harris does not share his position on universal healthcare.

“We need Medicare for All,” he said in a Monday interview with Politico. “That’s not her view, nor is it President Biden’s point of view. And you know what, I think I’m right and they’re wrong.”

During his DNC speech, Sanders also railed against the influence of big money in politics, in spite of all the billionaire megadonors helping to fund Harris’ campaign.

“Billionaires in both parties should not be able to buy elections—including primary elections,” Sanders said.

Harris has a well-documented Rolodex of billionaire megadonors helping fund her campaign, along with millions more in small-dollar donations.

“We must take on big pharma big oil, big ag, big tech and all the other corporate monopolists whose greed is denying progress for working people,” Sanders said.

By making universal healthcare, money in politics and class warfare all key planks of his DNC speech — and by never extolling Harris’ virtues, Sanders knowingly bucked an unspoken rule of presidential conventions: Speakers are expected to sing the praises of the party’s nominee.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

And while he offered a quick note of support for Harris’ election fight against former President Donald Trump, Sanders’ positions effectively drew a contrast with the vice president.

Sanders’ speech on Tuesday was not the first time he expressed noticeably tepid support for Harris.

“She’s a great campaigner,” Sanders said of Harris in the Monday Politico interview. “We’re not best friends, but I’ve known her for many years.”

Sanders said Monday that while he supports Harris, he stands by his belief that President Joe Biden could have carried out a second term, a view that is not shared by most of his party’s leaders.

Sanders remained fervently loyal to Biden even after his disastrous debate that led Democratic party members to voice concerns about his reelection bid.

Not so radical?

But Sanders’ decision to highlight some of the distance between himself and Harris, though unconventional, could ultimately be an asset to the vice president, as she works to appeal to moderate, undecided voters.

An August poll from the New York Times and Siena College found that 45% of likely voters felt Harris was too liberal or too progressive in the battleground states Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina.

That sentiment is in part a result of Trump’s effort to paint Harris as a radical progressive, an attempt to scare off Democrat-curious undecided voters who may lean more moderate.

“Comrade Kamala Harris is terrible for our Country. She is a Communist, has always been a Communist, and will always be a Communist,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Sunday.

But Sanders’ half-hearted enthusiasm for Harris offers a direct rebuttal to those Republican attacks.

A Democratic Socialist and one of the farthest left lawmakers on Capitol Hill, Sanders is a reminder for center-leaning voters that there are plenty of Democrats who are far more radical than the vice president.

That message might already have begun to take hold with the electorate.

Austin Davis, a 29-year old self-declared communist from Chicago, told NBC News on Tuesday that he does not consider Harris a communist.

“Kamala is not a communist,” he said. “Any person who can understand even the basic definition knows that she’s not a communist.”


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Ella Emhoff, Kamala Harris’s Stepdaughter, Wore a DNC Outfit that Triggered Conservatives’ Brain Worms

There are plenty of legitimate reasons why some voters might be shooting a narrow gaze at the pomp and circumstance of this year’s Democratic National Convention, not the least of which is the ever-climbing death toll in Gaza that brought out thousands of protesters on the first day of the DNC. (Check out our gallery featuring protesters outside the DNC here.)

A not-great reason to be annoying about the DNC: gender policing. But, as usual, the weirdos are being weird. After Ella Emhoff, the 25-year-old stepdaughter of Vice President Kamala Harris and the daughter of her husband, Doug Emhoff, wore a sleeveless Helmut Lang top and the Chappell Roan merch rip-off “Harris-Walz” camo hat to the first night of the DNC, seemingly brain worm-infested right-wingers like pro-eugenics Richard Hanania were gagged. (Sorry to make fun of your lived experience, RFK, Jr.)

“Ella Emhoff being a part of the first family has the potential to radicalize American parents,” Hanania tweeted on Tuesday. “I’m for women living the lives they want, but this is pretty much the nightmare scenario for most people with a daughter.”

Back to good-versus-bad reasons: It could be appropriate to wonder why Ella rocked the aesthetic of countless butches, myself included, on the first night of the DNC. (Cue the jokes that Ella looked like she queens out over a lavender oat latte or that, representing the Bushwick delegation, she was giving, “threw the first brick at Myrtle-Broadway”). It would not, however, be appropriate at all to transvestigate Ella or call her the fear of parents nationwide for violating a very strict concept of what gender-marginalized people are “allowed” to look like in public.

It harkens back to the measly, snide remarks about “childless cat ladies” from vice presidential nominee JD Vance, and Ella then felt compelled to defend Harris. Meanwhile, right-wing activist Charlie Kirk complained about Ella visibly demonstrating a positive relationship with her dad, which, weird way to bring up your daddy issues, but I guess everybody needs an entry point to talk about the tough stuff.

Sitting here and lamenting that someone signed to IMG Models isn’t doing womanhood to your liking isn’t just bizarre and tacky, it’s also a way to target people without the privileges and security of a vice president’s daughter.

Just in case you weren’t aware, being a woman or LGBTQ+ person in this country sucks. Two years after the overturning of Roe v. Wade, abortion access has become what Human Rights Watch called a “human rights crisis.” Trans people are terrified the election is actually a ruling on their ability to access health care. Queer and trans people have spent the whole Biden presidency watching their communities be targeted by mass shooters, Nazis, and Republicans (with plenty of Democrats stepping back and letting it all roll). And marginalized people writ large have a lot to lose no matter what happens during this presidential election.


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