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Candidate Statement and Biography for Washington State

Frank Moore Candidate Statement

My platform provides for a minimum income of $1,000 a month for every citizen, which will give people money to spend, save, invest, or pool with others to create more effective financial communities. This will open up a wide range of opportunities for the average person…to start small businesses, to stay on the family farm, to do art, to raise kids, etc.

My platform also provides for free universal health care [which will include long-term care, home attendants, medicine, etc.], free life time education [including child care], and free mass transit.

These policies will in effect put more real money in the pocket of the average person. But more importantly, the fear of the future will fade, releasing what is now horded away for old age, for when your health fails you, for your kid’s education…releasing the knot in your belly of knowing that no matter how much you manage to save [if any] it will not be enough.

So write in Frank Moore for President and Susan Block for Vice President on election day! For more information, go to http://frankmooreforpresident08.com/.

Frank Moore Biography

Frank Moore, 62, is a performance artist, poet, teacher, writer, painter, and musician known world-wide for his experimental art. Moore and four other performance artists were targeted by Senator Jesse Helms in the early 1990s in what is commonly seen as the first battle of the cultural wars. In 1999, Moore started the award-winning web-station Love Underground Visionary Revolution, www.luver.com.

Moore was born with cerebral palsy and cannot walk or talk. He communicates using a laser-pointer and board of letters, numbers, and words. Moore sings, plays piano, and hosts a weekly internet show, The Shaman’s Den.

Wyoming

“If you want to vote for someone whose name does not appear on the ballot, you can simply write the name of the individual in the space provided and blacken the oval next to the name.”
2008 Wyoming Voter’s Guide (.pdf)

Wisconsin

There is no information online specific to write-in voting in Wisconsin. Ask your local polling place how to write-in a candidate!

West Virginia

Find voting instructions for West Virginia here. Scroll to the bottom of the page for instructions for the different voting systems used in this state. Not all the instructional .pdfs contain information specific to write-in voting, so check with your polling place!

Washington

This poster for the state of Washington demonstrates how to write-in a candidate on a paper ballot. Washington employs various voting machines statewide. Ask for more information about how to write-in a candidate at your polling place!

Vermont

View a sample Vermont ballot here, with instructions for writing in a candidate.

Rhode Island

There is no information online specific to write-in voting in Rhode Island. Ask your local polling place how to write-in a candidate!

South Carolina

This state does not permit write-in voting for President/Vice-President.

South Dakota

This state does not permit write-in voting for President/Vice-President.

Utah

Here are instructions for the two types of voting systems used in Utah, and how to write-in a candidate.

TOUCH-SCREEN BALLOTS:
Record “Write-Ins”. Touching the box next to “Write-In” makes a keyboard appear. Type the name you wish to write-in. Touch “Record Write-In” to return to the ballot.

OPTICAL SCAN BALLOTS
Write-in voting. You may also vote for a valid write-in candidate. Do this by legibly writing the name of the write-in candidate in the space provided on the ballot or by placing in that space a sticker containing the office and write-in candidate’s name. You must also fill in the oval next to the write-in candidate’s name.

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