Do you research candidates? What sites do you use?

  • Zarxrax@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    https://vote411.org https://ballotpedia.org

    I use these sites to see what races are on my local ballot and to get an idea about who is running. If you need more info, you might search on some of your local news stations or newspaper websites.

    For the major races, like President or Congress, hopefully you have already decided by now.

    • QuarterSwede@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Ballotpedia is fantastic for most of our elections as the summaries are well done and accurate. If you can’t read legalese, you’ll love their amendment, etc summaries.

      • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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        1 month ago

        Yep, used that site for the local stuff to trace back candidate histories and how they answered questions. If you’re ever a candidate for anything, be sure to make some effort to fill some of that stuff out, as people are looking for something to work with. A blank profile with no idea of who you are vs. someone who has at least a line or two makes a big difference. These non-political party positions are hard enough to make choices, we need more than a name to work with.

        Also, a huge help on the amendment side. I had no clue which way to go until I got some decent background on what the point was, and who had pushed for it to be on the ballot. Follow the money.

  • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    I’ve been impressed with the results of searching for the word “scandal” alongside each candidate name.

    I’ve learned about racist incumbent judges, administrators being investigated for embezzlement, and folks with a history of slashing funding to things I care about like education and fire protection.

  • RagingHungryPanda@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    The league of women voters does a great job of presenting information and comparisons on each candidate. They also have a tool to help you make a ballot so you can remember your choices.

    lwv.org

  • DontTakeMySky@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Check a sample ballot so you know what races are up for a vote. Don’t let the first time you see a candidate be at the voting location.

    My government publishes a booklet of candidate statements and details of ballot measures that gets sent out to all voters. Candidates can lie in their statements so don’t trust the ones who sound agreeable, but I can usually rule out more than a few based on them strongly supporting issues I’m against. This lets me rule out the worst choices for me and focus my research on a smaller set of candidates/races where the choice isn’t as obvious. Check candidate websites for a similar statement. Focus on ruling out people you strongly disagree with. Bookmark the ones that need more digging.

    Then I tend to check voter guides published by news organizations and charities with a similar lean as me. I don’t follow them directly, but they give me a sense of who people with similar leanings support. This has helped me discover some candidates who were directly misleading in their statements and didn’t have the support of the people they claim agree with them. If any names in the voting guide surprise you, dig deeper on them.

    Party affiliation is unfortunately meaningful in federal elections, and many top level state elections as well, but avoid voting straight ticket based on party. There are often local elections where party affiliation isn’t as important. It may matter if my governer is Red or Blue ,but it probably matters less what my Coroner is (…I’ll admit though that my feelings on this are changing in recent years. I’m still against straight ticket voting because it’s important to check each race individually.) Try to find a basic 2 sentence or so description of each position that’s up for election so you know what kind of power that position has. That will help you judge if a candidate’s stances on certain issues matter for their position. It’s great that my Coroner supports X but that’s irrelevant to their job so I won’t factor it in.

    Finally I make sure to read the long form of every ballot measure or amendment. The short version almost always sounds appealing but often the long form uncovers really important nuances. Never just vote based on the short form, it’s way too easy to sneak in really terrible policies by constructing an agreeable tagline.

  • 2ugly2live@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I vote by mail, so usually once I get the packet, I’ll just go through and research people. I won’t lie, if I see someones political sign constantly with a candidate I don’t like, I take them off the list without researching. There’s at least one in my area that is always with Trump. Didn’t even give her a Google search. I usually don’t do it all at once, but I get it in before the deadline. 👍🏾

  • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    The Swedish state-run media puts out a very good comparison between all the parties each election year which I use to understand what position each party has. It’s been generally easy to figure out which party is closest to me using that tool. It can be used for the three tiers of elections that we have in Sweden.

    Other than that I try to look at polls to see whether it would be generally better for me to place a strategic vote on a party that is not my first choice.

  • simplymath@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    a variety of independent news sources.

    Wikipedia is notoriously susceptible to bias when it comes to history and politics and has a noted left center bias (according to researchers at Harvard, not my words).

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideological_bias_on_Wikipedia

    I’m not saying it’s a terrible sources but it definitely should not be the last stop and anything controversial (or the lack thereof) isn’t a meaningful indicator of whether or not something is actually true. Note the numerous examples of historical revisionism in the linked article.

  • That_Devil_Girl@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    If it’s local city elections, it’s difficult as the line between parties gets fuzzy. Some candidates have little to no info on their policies and such.

    If I can’t find anything about them at all, I won’t vote for them. If they’re hyper religious or make it their main focus of their campaign, I won’t vote for them. Other than that, it’s just a coin toss.

    Larger elections like stare and national are a bit easier. If they have the letter R next to their name, it’s safe to assume they’re insane, evil, or both. It’s become the norm these days. That makes it a choice between independants and democrats. I guess it comes down to which has better policies on issues I care about.

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I don’t vote in the US (fortunately?). You mainly vote for a party. There are 8 of them in the Parliament and none near 50% so they negotiate and eventually 50% of the MPs agree on a government and a prime minister.

    We have various websites and news outlets that are mostly neutral that make “election compasses” that lets you answer a bunch of questions regarding various topics and sorts parties based on how close they match yours.

    I’ll take a closer look at the most aligned ones.

  • BertramDitore@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    I usually start with Calmatters. They tend to have good writeups for CA ballots when I’m looking for how candidates feel about specific policies.

    Then I go to my local independent newspaper, which runs interviews with all major local candidates. I usually have a pretty good idea of who I’m going for by the time I read the interviews, but they’ll often put me the over the edge for a particular candidate and help me finalize my decision.

  • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I do research while voting from my desk, referencing online sources with the LoWV pamphlet. I got my ballot last Thursday and had it right back in the mailbox that evening.

  • Björn Tantau@swg-empire.de
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    1 month ago

    In Germany we have a site called Wahl-O-Mat (vote-o-mat) where you can answer questions on many issues and you can set how important they are for you and then you get a score of where all the parties stand on those issues.