John Henckel did not need to scan his memory banks long before finding a perfect example. “When I went to last election,” Henckel said of the 2008 general election on Nov. 4, “everybody was prepared for who they were going to vote for the senate, for the state offices and for president. “But then when you flipped the ballot over, there was a whole series of questions from the state that had to do with everything from how we were going to handle hunting and fishing and everything else.
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