Does "voted present" mean "voted that the present law be maintained"?

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Re: Does "voted present" mean "voted that the present law be maintained"?

No, it means they voted "I am here" when asked a yes/no question.
 
Re: Does "voted present" mean "voted that the present law be maintained"?

No, it means they voted "I am here" when asked a yes/no question.
I've never heard of that. That's obviously an abstention. Is that the normal way to abstain? I suppose it has some profound historical significance.
 
Re: Does "voted present" mean "voted that the present law be maintained"?

It's usually used when a politician doesn't want to be "on the record" for opponents to use his vote against him. A form of cowardice, in other words.

See this article on the practice in Illinois:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=18348437
 
Re: Does "voted present" mean "voted that the present law be maintained"?

I've never heard of that. That's obviously an abstention. Is that the normal way to abstain? I suppose it has some profound historical significance.

New to me too.
 
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