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The Popular Vote is Irrelevant

Quetzal

A little to the left and slightly out of focus.
Premium Member
The real relevance of the pop vote is that Democrats can find hope in a losing election being so close.
I think there is a bit of merit to that. If I were on the board the dealt with campaigning, I could say "Well, we had the popular vote but we really struggled in state X,Y, and Z. If we can get that same kind of turn out in those states, maybe next time will be different."
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Whacha mean?
Dems & Pubs each see themselves as so different.
But they fundamentally aren't.
Pubs imagine they're the party of a strong military, but Dems have expanded military spending too.
Dems imagine they're the party of civil rights, but Nixon advanced them far more than did Obama.
 

Monk Of Reason

༼ つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
Dems & Pubs each see themselves as so different.
But they fundamentally aren't.
Pubs imagine they're the party of a strong military, but Dems have expanded military spending too.
Dems imagine they're the party of civil rights, but Nixon advanced them far more than did Obama.
You already know my opinion on this. Both are owned by the same people and we have carefully calculated constructed divisions over things that don't matter on the large scale but only the very personal.
 

Adramelek

Setian
Premium Member
If you want to play that card, then tying the hands of the electoral college goes against what was originally intended. The college members were supposed to be free to deliberate and decide for themselves who the President should be.

And they overwhelmingly voted for Donald Trump.
 

Watchmen

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
The fact is the majority of the active electorate was not duped by Trump. You are merely arguing that they could have been if Trump had campaigned in California, etc. That's not a fact, that's a speculation.
And you are equally speculating that Hillary would still have won the popular vote if we didn't have the electorate.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
I think there is a bit of merit to that. If I were on the board the dealt with campaigning, I could say "Well, we had the popular vote but we really struggled in state X,Y, and Z. If we can get that same kind of turn out in those states, maybe next time will be different."
That's the productive way to face loss, ie, learn from it.
It beats stamping one's feet, & cursing the other side.
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
And the popular vote would have been different if we didn't have the electoral system.
... because the candidates would have done a better job of building support among the entire people instead of just certain swing states. Again, I don't see why this would be bad.
 

Watchmen

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
No, I don't.

Edit: the will of the people is independent of any particular system. It's the thing you try to set your system up to achieve.
The popular vote would have been different if we didn't have the electorate. We don't know who would have won the popular vote in such a situation.
 

Kuzcotopia

If you can read this, you are as lucky as I am.
The popular vote is irrelevant because it has nothing to do with how the "game" is played. It's like a baseball team losing a game then complaining that they had more hits. If the game was to win the popular vote then both camps would have campaigned differently, and we have no idea what the result would have been. For example, if it was about the popular vote, do you think Trump would have ignored California during the general? I don't think so. No one can say with any certainty what the popular vote would have been.

Yeah, and what if Hillary had not ignored Texas? She only lost my 6 points. It's a game played both ways.

Yes, Trump gains the office through the electoral college.

But no, he'll still have to govern based in the court of popular opinion. . . and he will soon find this out.

Look, spporters of Trump who still complain about this election business would like nothing better than continue election controversy, maybe forever. Then, you can still talk about Hillary's corruption and those rare instances of liberals acting inappropriately.

But in a few more days, they'll be nothing else for you to do or whine about, outside of the positions, political tactics, and governance of President Trump.

I'm ready to move on. Are you?
 

Watchmen

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
... because the candidates would have done a better job of building support among the entire people instead of just certain swing states. Again, I don't see why this would be bad.
I never said it was bad. My point is the Hillary supporters like to point to the popular vote, but that vote is irrelevant because it is not an accurate representation of the people in an electorate system.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
You already know my opinion on this. Both are owned by the same people and we have carefully calculated constructed divisions over things that don't matter on the large scale but only the very personal.
I'd forgotten, so it's good that you remind me.
My view is that the similarity results from optimum strategy, ie, both parties fight over the 1% in the
middle because that's where victory lies. Another way to state this is that the maximum number of
votes won will often be attained by being only slightly to one side of the other on the political spectrum.
Dems need be only slightly to the left of Pubs, & Pubs only slightly to the right of Dems.
 

Watchmen

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
Yeah, and what if Hillary had not ignored Texas? She only lost my 6 points. It's a game played both ways.

Yes, Trump gains the office through the electoral college.

But no, he'll still have to govern based in the court of popular opinion. . . and he will soon find this out.

Look, spporters of Trump who still complain about this election business would like nothing better than continue election controversy, maybe forever. Then, you can still talk about Hillary's corruption and those rare instances of liberals acting inappropriately.

But in a few more days, they'll be nothing else for you to do or whine about, outside of the positions, political tactics, and governance of President Trump.

I'm ready to move on. Are you?

I know it goes both ways. I've repeatedly said we do not know who would have won. Maybe Trump. Maybe Hillary. That's my whole point.
 
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