Hello all,
Thank you all very much for participating in our democracy by casting your ballot during the Nov. 3, 2020, general election.
No matter who you have voted for, you have set national records in participation this year — all during a time of one of the worst pandemics in our nation’s history.
Now, the hard part begins. Patience.
As we write this, various news agencies are reporting that former Vice President Joe Biden has won Pennsylvania to put him over the 270 electoral votes needed to become the 46th U.S. President.
Those news services include:
- Associated Press — Biden wins White House, vowing new direction for divided US
- CNBC — Election 2020 live results: Biden projected to defeat Trump, claims national mandate
- CNN — Election results live: Joe Biden wins presidency
- Fox News — Fox News projects Biden to defeat Trump, become 46th president after winning Nevada, Pennsylvania
- NBC News — Biden defeats Trump to win White House, NBC News projects
- New York Times — Joe Biden Wins 2020 President Election
- NPR — Biden Wins Presidency, According To AP, Edging Trump In Turbulent Race
- Washington Post — Biden Defeats Trump
However, thousands of ballots remain to be counted in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. We owe it to election workers to complete their jobs and count every single ballot. This may take days, maybe weeks for the process to work itself out, but if you were patient enough to register to vote, fill out a ballot or stand in line at the polling place, then waiting a little longer shouldn’t be too hard.
Relax, breathe deep, spend some quality time with your family or socially distance time with your friends. The results will be known soon.
We need to bring this country together and we are confident that each and every one of you are up to the challenge.
Veterans Day will be next Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2020. The day was chosen as a remembrance of veterans who have served this nation, including those American soldiers who had to wait until the 11th day of November and the 11th hour of 1918 before they could put down their weapons and celebrate the Armistice that ended World War I. They fought for America’s and the world’s democracy and they rightly deserved to be honored.
I’m sure patience was in short supply that day, but they carried on, did their duty and earned the respect of Americans throughout the nation.
So, is it too much to ask for us to honor their memory, have patience, honor their sacrifice and do our duty to make sure our democracy completes its job during this election season.