Election spam is one thing... but election spam from another country???
Driving home from my girlfriend's house last night, I came across a number of posters and bumper stickers stapled to utility poles and trees along the median of the boulevard. Needless to say, the spam didn't stay up very long. Best of all, it was brand new - the signs weren't there when I was driving to her house. The signs never saw the light of day.
#1. "RE: Dominican Republic Election Spam" In response to Reply # 0
One idea to address this issue: You might want to send an E-mail to the embassy of the Dominican Republic (http://www.domrep.org/home.htm )
While the embassy is certainly not responsible for the street spam you saw, they may have a mailing list for citizens of that country. They might be in a position to ask citizens to refrain from using street spam here to campaign for an election back home.
For all you know, the rival party may find some way to trash the other party for spamming another country...
Most likely, their citizens living here can do an absentee ballot by way of the embassy - US expats can normally do that through the American Embassy in the the country they are living in...