Thanks to CNN...
Q. Why are presidential elections always in November, and always on Tuesdays?
Q. Why are presidential elections always in November, and always on Tuesdays?
It all comes down to weather, harvests and worship.
Back when voters traveled
to the polls by horse, Tuesday was an ideal day because it allows
people to worship on Sunday, ride to their county seat on Monday and
vote on Tuesday - all before market day, Wednesday.
And the month of November
fit nicely between harvest time and brutal winter weather -- which can
be especially bad when you're trudging along by horse and buggy.
But since many voters now travel by horsepower instead of live horses, some people -- like the group Why Tuesday?
-- are pushing to move election day to a weekend day to increase the
country's historically dismal voter turnout. According to the group, 15
states do not allow early voting, and 27% of non-voters said the main
reason why they didn't vote was because they were too busy or couldn't
get time off to vote.
Q. Why do Republicans have an elephant and Democrats have a donkey?
Back in 1874, cartoonist
Thomas Nast used an elephant to depict the Republican vote in his
drawing "The Third-Term Panic." The cartoon was published in Harper's
Weekly after the owner of the New York Herald reportedly criticized the
notion of Republican President Ulysses S. Grant running for a third
term. (Grant didn't end up running in the next election).
In the drawing,
an "ass" -- depicting the New York Herald -- scares away other animals
in a forest as the elephant -- or the Republican vote -- looks like it's
about to stumble into a pit.
But that cartoon isn't where where the Democratic donkey came from. In 1828, Democrat Andrew Jackson's critics called him a "jackass" because of his populist views and his slogan, "Let the people rule."
Jackson decided to run with it -- even using images of a donkey in his
campaign ads. Later, Nast also used a donkey to depict the Democratic
party.
Q. Why are Democratic states "blue," and why are Republican states "red"?
There's nothing magical about this color scheme. Essentially, the media made it up.
Via CNN
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