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Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
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http://www.bush-mccainchallenge.com/?rc=homepage Senator Clinton's speech seemed odd. I respect her decision to say what she said tonight, but she is fooling herself and her supporters. -Jason |
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
I've heard (and I agree) that she doesn't want to be the VP because she wants Obama to lose in November and to run again in 2012. Her speech tonight would indicate that.
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Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
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For giggles, I been reading the blog comments on Senator Clinton's website tonight. Yikes. Jason |
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
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I'm still amazed that Hillary continued her claim that she's more electable and has more popular votes, even after Obama clinched the nomination. I mean, I can believe she said it, but I just find it to be stunning that she's willing to try to hobble the Democratic party for her own personal satisfaction. It's like watching the biggest, slowest car wreck in history happen right before our eyes. Honestly, I have no doubt that Obama can beat McCain - Hillary's the one I'm scared of. Will she help, or hinder? |
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
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I think I can remember one year when the Lib Dems actually had more votes nationally than Labour in the general election but still came in a sorry 3rd on the first-past-the-post basis. It sucks, perhaps, but those are the rules we play by. And now she should gracefully retire from the scene. |
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
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First, every state has different voting methods. Some have closed primaries where only Democrats can vote for Democrats. Some have open primaries, where people registered to any party can vote for Democrats. And then others have caucuses, in which smaller groups get together and have old-timey debates and discussions about the candidates and then vote. Even if we only consider these factors, we can see that the popular vote is an unreliable measure of support. In many states, you had Republicans, encouraged by people like Rush Limbaugh, voting for Hillary in an effort to extend the race. And clearly, caucuses don't give a good idea of what the popular vote numbers would be...they don't even report exact numbers of how many people voted in them. But even beyond that, the delegates awarded from county to county are based not on sheer numbers of people, but on Democratic loyalty. Say you had two counties, each with a population of 100 people. The first county is made up of 10 registered Democrats, and 90 registered Republicans, and consistently votes Republican in elections. The second county is the exact opposite, with 10 registered Republicans and 90 registered Democrats, and consistently votes Democratic. The second county that consistently votes Democratic would have more delegates alloted to them than the first, effectively giving their votes more weight. So it's not only a delegate-based system - it's actually structured in a way that makes it impossible to keep track of what the actual popular vote totals are. That's why, on CNN at least, they present multiple scenarios when discussing the popular vote. "If you count caucus estimates...", "if you count Michigan...", "if you blah blah blah...." And of course, when it comes to Hillary's claim that she has the popular vote, she's happy to count all the Republican votes cast purely in an effort to hurt the Democratic party, but discards the caucus votes despite the fact that caucuses are typically run by the most passionate Democrats in the country. And more importantly, at it's foundation, her argument is basically along the lines of saying that if this were a soccer/football game, then she should win based on how long she had possession of the ball, not on goals. And as far as she's concerned, who cares if no one else knew they were playing for possession time and instead racked up more goals? All she's accomplishing at this point is working her most fervent supporters into a frothy excitement over the prospect of going to Denver and trying to steal the nomination away from Obama. Hardly party unity. |
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Finally.
Hillary sent out the following message:
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Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Well, I don't know what everyone else thought, but I'd say that was a good constructive rousing speech from Clinton.
Hopefully it will have convinced many of her most ardent supporters to back Obama. |
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