Of course, that ignores the many Tea Party candidates that won in the House...
And you can't figure out why that is?
You can't figure out why Tea Party candidates did so well in the House, where they are elected in lopsided districts, but can't win a statewide vote, except for very conservative states like Kentucky and Utah, where the winner is decided in the Republican primary, not the general election?
Would Sarah Palin be running on a statewide ballot for President, or just in overwhelmingly conservative districts?
Would Sarah Palin be running on a statewide ballot for President, or just in overwhelmingly conservative districts? You're the one that wants us to believe winning in Delaware is a measure of whether a candidate can win a Presidential election. It isn't.
You want us to believe that underfunded and supported rookie political candidates like Angle and Buck compare to someone that was elected the governor of a state and participated in a Presidential election campaign. They don't.