Posted on 10/14/2015 9:26:55 AM PDT by wright2bear
Elections are not mysterious events subject to the whimsy of unpredictable candidates and voters. Theyre actually highly predictable, with a set of variables that influence outcomes in familiar ways.
Because of that, we can say, with reasonable confidence, that a Republican will be moving into the White House in 2017.
(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.reuters.com ...
The above statement doesnt take into consideration ballot box stuffing, the alleged ballot box stuffing concerning lawless Obamas reelection an example.
Nice article, thanks.
Thank you for posting. Interesting, seemingly reasonable article.
Bernie Sanders in last night’s debate said “Congress doesn’t control Wall St. Wall St. controls Congress” and he’s right. His solutions to this problem - put more and different people in charge - are wrong but both him and Trump have correctly identified the problem.
and
It happened in 3 cities in 3 swing states with a high number of electoral votes. 3 precincts. That's all it takes to steal a presidential election.
Amazing info. FReepers in those precincts and swing states, Go For It!
There are no Freepers in those precincts. In one Philly precinct, on election day, the Republican poll watchers got thrown out of the polling area and didn't get back in for several hours, even though a judge ordered it.
Yeah. Especially how high JEBs poll numbers aint.And the identity of the leading Republican candidate . . .
Actually, I agree with your analysis otherwise. But rather than relying on a mushy middle theory, IMHO turnout is usually the trump card.Same effect, except that the mushy middle theory tells the GOPe that they really are going to win if they avoid associating with conservatives. Whereas the turnout theory says you can gain more by going conservative than you lose in the middle.
You’re right, he did correctly identify the problem: Wall Street controls Congress. But his solution is for Congress (or “the State”) to control Wall Street.
In reality, neither one should control the other.
We’ve been witnessing it for the last 3 election cycles - the old paradigm that the models are based on has no basis in current reality.
First, a Republican will win because voters typically shy away from the party currently in power when an incumbent isnt running. In fact, a successor candidate is three times less likely to win.
Second, President Barack Obamas approval ratings are too low to suggest a successor candidate will take the White House.
If we can overcome the democratic party cheating.
Anything that can be done preventively next time? Sheriff's deputy or Oath Keepers with the poll watchers plus maybe some extra volunteers?
"The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Wednesday shows that 45% of Likely U.S. Voters approve of President Obama's job performance. Fifty-four percent (54%) disapprove"
45% = 14% SUCCESSOR probability of victory
I think that changing back and forth between Democratic and Republican Presidents/Congressional Majorities shows that fundamentally a substantial number of people don't really like either party very much. When Democrats are in power and do their typically lousy job of running things, people run to the Republicans, mistakenly assuming a substantive alternative. Similarly, when you get disappointing Republicans (e.g. the Bushes), people think that electing a Democrat will suddenly cure the nation's ills. In fact, both either/or strategies just get us more of the same, to the point where both parties have basically converged.
Perhaps others want to sacrifice their nation and families on that alter. I don't.
Depends on who the Republicans nominate.
Depends on who the Republicans nominate.
Turnout doesn’t effect things that much. Largely because we’re divided into 3rd. Even if one side has 100% turnout that’s not enough to win the election, you still need people from the middle. Turnout effects how much middle support you need, but you have to have that middle support.
There is the one proviso we get from the exceptions: don’t #$%^ it up. If the GOP seriously alienates their base the turnout could be so low that the currents of the mushy middle don’t help. But if they don’t alienate the base they will win next year. Much like we could tell at this point in 2007 that the Dems could nominate a box of rocks and still win in 08.
Three basic unrefutable reasons nobama re-won in 2012.
First, a significant number of GOP/conservative voters did not vote, just could not vote for Mitt.
Second and third, dem vote fraud tipped both Florida and Ohio by just enough to give the electoral college to nobama.
The more shameful thing is that not one damn thing has been done to correct the dem’s abilities to bring in 2 or 3% by voter fraud.
The good news is that nobama and the dems have so pissed in the well that the usual voters are not going for any dem this trip.
Mittens took a dive......
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