Dixville Notch Starts the New Hampshire Primary
Dixville Notch Starts the New Hampshire Primary
"It's an honor and a privilege and a responsibility. Voting to begin with is a privilege, which was the message we always hoped to send." Otten, 70, says the lodge, which is now his eight-bedroom home, will be transformed into a newsroom of sorts, with about 80 journalists there to record the first votes cast in New Hampshire's 2020 primary. “It's a great lesson in American democracy,” says Otten, who has been spending his time getting ready for the media onslaught, including making sure that the Wi-Fi in his house can handle the extra traffic Monday night. The walls of the lodge's dining room are covered with photographs of the past presidential hopefuls who have come through, from Ronald Reagan to George Bush to Bill Clinton to John McCain. As soon as the five Dixville Notch voters vote, the “poll” will quickly be closed and the scores of journalists in Otten's home will report the results. The midnight voting only works if everyone who is eligible to vote shows up. That's because under state election law, if even one eligible voter doesn't show up, The Balsams’ polling place must remain open until that voter votes or until 7 p.m. Tuesday, the statewide closing time. That won't be an issue this year, when all five eligible voters will be in Otten's living room at the appointed time. But in years past, as many as 29 people were registered in Dixville Notch, and it wasn't unusual for election officials to fan out through the town to search out all the eligible voters and get them to the poll at midnight.
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Sarah Rice Les Otten in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire. It all started 60 years ago when Neil Tillotson decided he didn't want to drive 45 miles in the snow to cast a vote in New Hampshire's presidential primary. Determined to still do his civic duty, he went to the state legislature and got permission to create a polling place in Dixville Notch, where he lived and owned The Balsams ski and golf resort. The story goes that a wire service reporter had told Tillotson that a couple of other small New Hampshire towns voted early at midnight. Intrigued by the idea of being among the first to cast a ballot, Tillotson decided to adopt the same practice. Six decades later, the Dixville Notch tradition remains alive today, carried on by his son. "It's an honor and a privilege and a responsibility,” says Tom Tillotson, 75, who picked up the middle-of-the-night voting custom after his father, who operated a rubber factory and is credited with inventing the modern latex balloon, died in 2001 at the age of 102. “Voting to begin with is a privilege, which was the message we always hoped to send."How midnight voting works
When the clock struck midnight and , five voters filed into the living room of The Balsams’ Beaver Lodge and put their paper votes into the same wooden box that Dixville Notch ballots have been placed in since 1960. Tom Tillotson was joined in the midnight voting ritual by his wife and son, as well as Les Otten, the new owner of the resort, and one of Otten's employees. Michael Bloomberg emerged as the winner. Three voters – two Democrats and the sole Republican – didn’t vote for any of the candidates on the primary ballots and instead wrote in the former New York City mayor’s name. Former South Bend, Ind. Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders picked up the other two Democrats’ votes. Statewide, Sanders won the primary, with Buttigieg second and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar third. President Trump easily won the Republican contest. When Neil Tillotson was alive, he always cast the first vote, says his son, who didn't feel comfortable taking on that responsibility. Now, voters’ names are placed in a hat and they draw for who goes first."It's an honor and a privilege and a responsibility. Voting to begin with is a privilege, which was the message we always hoped to send." Otten, 70, says the lodge, which is now his eight-bedroom home, will be transformed into a newsroom of sorts, with about 80 journalists there to record the first votes cast in New Hampshire's 2020 primary. “It's a great lesson in American democracy,” says Otten, who has been spending his time getting ready for the media onslaught, including making sure that the Wi-Fi in his house can handle the extra traffic Monday night. The walls of the lodge's dining room are covered with photographs of the past presidential hopefuls who have come through, from Ronald Reagan to George Bush to Bill Clinton to John McCain. As soon as the five Dixville Notch voters vote, the “poll” will quickly be closed and the scores of journalists in Otten's home will report the results. The midnight voting only works if everyone who is eligible to vote shows up. That's because under state election law, if even one eligible voter doesn't show up, The Balsams’ polling place must remain open until that voter votes or until 7 p.m. Tuesday, the statewide closing time. That won't be an issue this year, when all five eligible voters will be in Otten's living room at the appointed time. But in years past, as many as 29 people were registered in Dixville Notch, and it wasn't unusual for election officials to fan out through the town to search out all the eligible voters and get them to the poll at midnight.