Aseahawkfan wrote:If Trump lets this run its course and he gets cleared even after a few years, his ego will grow even larger than it is now. Can you imagine if they let this run until the next election, then clear or charge Trump right before the elections? It would be huge one way or the other. If they charge some Clinton people in this, it will further hurt the Dems.
We really need an independent to gain some prominence and run. Strike while the iron is hot and both parties are looking pathetic.
idhawkman wrote:The only thing an independent does is guarantee a win for the side that is less like the independent. Bernie declared he is an Independant again a couple weeks ago. Maybe that is a good thing for the Republicans.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
We'll see. People will at some point get fed up with all this bullcrap.
idhawkman wrote:The only thing an independent does is guarantee a win for the side that is less like the independent. Bernie declared he is an Independant again a couple weeks ago. Maybe that is a good thing for the Republicans.
RiverDog wrote:Not from my perspective. Clinton was going to win my state by a huge margin, so I felt that my voting for the Libertarian not only eased my conscience by not having to choose between the lesser of two evils, my decision wasn't going to have any effect on the outcome of the election. Had WA been a battleground state, I might have felt differently.
idhawkman wrote:You could say, they just did and elected Trump because of it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
Doesn't seem to have worked then. Maybe any real change is beyond working given the state of Washington. Congress is very powerful as well. It would take a real upheaval of Congress to make any real change for the nation happen. The President is a very limited figure. A disliked president even more limited.
idhawkman wrote:Respectively disagree with you on this one Asea. The president through reduction in regulation, executive orders, initiative and direction has done a whole lot already - without congress' involvement.
E.g. Coal industry, keystone pipeline, (energy independence), reduced regulation to spur the stock market to new highs ($5T in gains since his election), dessimating ISIS overseas and has crumbled the Califate, 1.5M Americans off of Food stamps, lowest unemployment in over 20 years and rising real wages for the first time in over 20 years. That's just a few of the things that have happened in the last 9 months but you won't hear about these things if you don't dig for the story and only listen to Main Stream Media (I'm not accusing you of doing that, I'm just saying they never cover anything positive that he's done).
idhawkman wrote:Ahh, but it isn't about just your state and your consience, is it? It is about those 9 or 10 states that are close and can be swayed by splitting one of the party's votes by just a fraction. California, New York, Washington, Oregon, Massachussettes, Connecticut will never vote Republican and will never worry about an independent closely tied to the Democrats. But Iowa, Wisconsin, Michiagan, Pennsylvania, Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, etc are quite a different animal.
So even though your vote in your state doesn't matter, the same vote in another state matters quite a bit even in a Presidential election. Ask any Floridian that ...
RiverDog wrote:
That's why I've advocated that we modify the electoral college and do away with winner-take-all. It would force campaigns to canvas the country, and craft their message to appeal nation wide, rather than simply staying within one state or region.
idhawkman wrote:Dems would never win again since they only control the big city votes. Too many other delegates would go to the Repubs.
RiverDog wrote:Not really. Texas's big cities suddenly become Dem votes, as would places like New Orleans and Atlanta. Philadelphia, Detroit, Miami, etc are all big cities in red states.
It would be interesting to see how the electoral college would have gone in past elections had it not been winner-take-all.
idhawkman wrote:Ahhh, but remember grasshopper, that Donald Trump won 26 of the 58 counties in California and got 33% of the popular vote in California. Check out this link if you want proof. https://www.politico.com/2016-election/results/map/president/california/
You can look at any of the states here: https://www.politico.com/mapdata-2016/2016-election/results/map/president/
This one will be the best one to figure out by congressional district: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/1/30/1627319/-Daily-Kos-Elections-presents-the-2016-presidential-election-results-by-congressional-district
RiverDog wrote:
Yes, Trump still would have won in 2016 under the scenario I proposed, but not by as wide of a margin that he won in the electoral college. The score would have been Trump 290, Clinton 248 vs. 306 to 232. But the votes almost certainly wouldn't have fallen the way they did had the candidates been aware that it was not winner take all. Both candidates would have ran a much different campaign.
The point of my argument wasn't to try to change the results of the 2016 election by finding a scenario in which Clinton would have won, it was to reshape the campaign and reduce the impact that battleground states have on it. Trump might not have done so well in the electoral college had he been forced to move away from the rust belt and campaign to a nation wide audience. It would also help a 3rd party get some traction should a viable one ever take root.
The other change I'd make in the current electoral college would do would be to get rid of faithless electors and require by law that the vote go as determined by the ballot box result.
idhawkman wrote:Respectfully, I disagree. Take for instance, my district in Idaho will never go Democrat. I should qualify that statement with - it hasn't in my lifetime and won't in my lifetime going forward. So no matter what, the candidates are never going to come here. Most of the districts are that way throughout the U.S.
So it would boil down to the states again and the senators. E.g. there are 435 congressional districts and 100 senate seats. So the electoral college reflects these 535 seats. So the Senate seats are what would sway the vote in my opinion and that would depend on who is on the ballot that election year (1/3 of the senate is on the ballot every election year). So the campaigning would heavily favor those races and a few swing congressional districts. Therefore, I just don't see the selective campaigning changing based on your method. It would only focus the campaigning in a much condensed manner. E.g. instead of campaigning all over ohio, they would focus on a few swing districts within Ohio neglecting the rest of it.
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