dullard
Elite Member
Might as well link to one of the better poll aggregators:Need a source.
http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/election-2016/primary-forecast/new-hampshire-democratic/
Might as well link to one of the better poll aggregators:Need a source.
I'd normally agree with that. But, Republicans have thrown every ounce of every effort they have to attack Hillary and at the same time are fighting an internal war that may possibly nominate Trump. If they are successful at both, then we'd likely have Bernie winning the presidency. It is early, but Bernie is winning vs Trump in the polls. (I'll throw in one of the least reliable poll aggregators since I just posted 538 above:Bernie is the lefty equivalent of Ron Paul. Small group of vocal followers who are active on the internet, but in the grand scheme not going to win anything. Just like Paul, Bernie has some decent ideas, but they are overwhelmed by the overall crazy factor.
Bernie is the lefty equivalent of Ron Paul. Small group of vocal followers who are active on the internet, but in the grand scheme not going to win anything. Just like Paul, Bernie has some decent ideas, but they are overwhelmed by the overall crazy factor.
Gas station sign :sneaky:Need a source.
According to CNN's lastest, it is Bernie is at 50% of NH Dems and the Hilderbeast is at 40%. There are other numbers for those NH Dems, who have definitely decided (at only 52% of NH Dems), which is Bernie 64% and the Hilderbeast 35%
http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/19/politics/new-hampshire-cnn-wmur-poll-democrats/index.html.
All kinds of numbers, which out of context, are confusing or misleading. That's why we need citations.
No mention of O'Malley. Maybe if he spends the rest of the time just introducing himself, like he did at the start of the last debate, he might get noticed on the board. Then maybe Martha Raddatz will give him permission to speak.
This just proves the Romney 49% statement to be true.
Bernie is the lefty equivalent of Ron Paul. Small group of vocal followers who are active on the internet, but in the grand scheme not going to win anything. Just like Paul, Bernie has some decent ideas, but they are overwhelmed by the overall crazy factor.
Yea, unlike Trump🙄
Bernie would be a minor president since he'd get none of his agenda passed. But, with four supreme court justices in their 80s during that term, he could have a very long lasting impact based on his nominations for that position.
And an even greater impact of this possible scenario is what the younger voters think. It doesn't matter so much as to whether or not they vote NOW. But I'd be a Bernie / Trump matchup would drive a whole generation of younger voters to identify as Democrat (so it may impact the vote for decades later when these youth get older). The youth might not matter right now, but it may have the longest impact of all of Bernie's run. Trump is correct on one thing: there is a silent majority. They are the 60.5% of America that is under age 44. Think about it, are those the people you want to alienate?
Yes, very much unlike Trump. Like him or not, he's not in the lead for the repub nomination because of a vocal fringe following. He's in the lead for the repub nomination because of his overall fame/name/infamy. Paul and Bernie have a fringe following and gained some pub because they are not part of the "regular" establishment, but either way they simply don't have the level of support needed to come even close to winning their party's nomination.
It is very early on in the election, but I think that chance is very, very small. I personally don't see the democrats getting a super majority in this election cycle. To do so would require a good amount of non-college educated whites to switch parties. While that can theoretically happen, the excitement level just isn't there, and I don't yet see where it will come from.There is also a chance of a political revoluttion, albeit small, in which Bernie wins the election, creates immense buzz about actual change, and then the democrats get a super majority in the legislative branch.
It is very early on in the election, but I think that chance is very, very small. I personally don't see the democrats getting a super majority in this election cycle. To do so would require to be a good amount of non-college educated whites to switch parties. While that can theoretically happen, the excitement level just isn't there, and I don't yet see where it will come from.
I think a more likely, albeit still slim chance, is that republicans will forfeit the presidency IN ORDER TO get the super majority. Run a three-way race of Trump, GOP Establishment, and a democrat. The GOP would split their vote and the democrat will win the presidency. But, the GOP could get both the tea-party and the establishment groups to the voting booth and get the super majority in congress that way.
Yes, very much unlike Trump. Like him or not, he's not in the lead for the repub nomination because of a vocal fringe following. He's in the lead for the repub nomination because of his overall fame/name/infamy. Paul and Bernie have a fringe following and gained some pub because they are not part of the "regular" establishment, but either way they simply don't have the level of support needed to come even close to winning their party's nomination.