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HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Max Godsey, 86, stands outside the Hunter Street Baptist Church polling station. "We're here getting our two cents worth in, that’s all. You can’t complain about the process if you don’t engage in it. I’d like to see a change in Washington, D.C. I’m not happy with the last eight years to be honest, but the last four have been worse. I just don’t agree with the current administration. I think he’s lead us down the wrong path and we’re headed toward socialism. We need to back law enforcement, and that’s the main thing. I picked the person that I think is the best Christian. This is a Christian country founded on Christian principles. I don’t think we ought to abandon that. I’d like it to get back to what it was. We don’t teach morals in the schools anymore.. I just think we’re away from that and I don’t think that’s good for the country."
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal
OLDCITIES
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal
OLDCITIES
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