thraashman
Lifer
I can say I'd vote for Obama over any of the Republican options. If Huntsman were still in it, I might actually have a choice. I'm not sure there could be a candidate I would possibly vote for Santorum over.
I can say I'd vote for Obama over any of the Republican options. If Huntsman were still in it, I might actually have a choice. I'm not sure there could be a candidate I would possibly vote for Santorum over.
This. I could potentially vote for Huntsman over Obama. However, the GOP has gone way too far to the right by even thinking about nominating Santorum. They do not deserve to win the presidency. Obama could've been a slam dunk for the GOP had they nominated one of the now extinct moderates within their party.
Who are these extinct moderates you refer to?
Perry, or that fat pizza guy?
Funny that the poll currently has 1 more vote for not showing up than for Santorum (5-4).
I will vote against any candidate who runs on a "God" platform. We've had enough of those nutjobs in Washington.
Not that I'll vote anyway, but if I did it would probably be for Santorum just to get the reaction from people at parties.
I still stand by that I cannot see any future where a sane Republican Party nominates that guy. Maybe I just totally misunderstand how the right wing of America thinks, but they seriously can't be this dumb.
You're certainly free to vote however you wish, but unless it comes with a huge personal impact, I never understood "hot button" voting. If the election were a guy you agreed with 90% of the time, but was ok with abortion, against a guy you strongly disagreed with 90% of the time, but was against abortion, would you still vote for the latter?
My brother is a 1 issue voter too and he is constantly voting against his best interest and it's a good thing I vote to cancel his out. 😉
I don't get the "I won't vote" mentality. Disillusioned voters should still show up and vote for a third-party candidate, even if that person has no shot at winning. At least it sends a middle-fingered message to the Dems and GOP.
The winner cares that he won, the first loser cares that he lost and neither of them care about any of the other votes. You are basically giving the middle finger to a brick wall.I don't get the "I won't vote" mentality. Disillusioned voters should still show up and vote for a third-party candidate, even if that person has no shot at winning. At least it sends a middle-fingered message to the Dems and GOP.
I was surprised that at the moment, Santorum actually polls second best against Obama, and very close to Romney.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/us/general_election_romney_vs_obama-1171.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ep.../general_election_santorum_vs_obama-2912.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ep.../general_election_gingrich_vs_obama-1453.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/us/general_election_paul_vs_obama-1750.html
I suspect that when we get to the general election, if Santorum actually does win the nom, a lot of independents who are displeased with Obama but not following the GOP primary that closely will learn more about Santorum and the balance will shift more toward Obama than the present polls suggests. Still, only a 6.4% gap in favor of Obama is interesting.
- wolf
I was surprised that at the moment, Santorum actually polls second best against Obama, and very close to Romney.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/us/general_election_romney_vs_obama-1171.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ep.../general_election_santorum_vs_obama-2912.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/ep.../general_election_gingrich_vs_obama-1453.html
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/us/general_election_paul_vs_obama-1750.html
I suspect that when we get to the general election, if Santorum actually does win the nom, a lot of independents who are displeased with Obama but not following the GOP primary that closely will learn more about Santorum and the balance will shift more toward Obama than the present polls suggests. Still, only a 6.4% gap in favor of Obama is interesting.
- wolf
Remember, Obama only beat McCain by 7% or so, and that was a pretty epic ass kicking. Hell, Clinton only beat Dole by 8.5% and I remember the Onion running gag headlines about Dole demanding a preemptive recount.
True, but a 6.4% advantage is narrow this far in advance of the actual election. If the aggregate polls show that kind of gap on, say, October 20, that will be a different story. To me, 6.4% at this stage is kind of scary as it suggests that he's in striking distance given the amount of time left. I have speculated that the gap could widen when we really get into the general election campaign. I hope I'm correct.
McCain was actually briefly leading in early September of 2008, but most people knew he never had a chance. The campaign hasn't even actually started yet, and Santorum is an opposition researcher's dream.
I wouldn't worry about it. If Santorum is the GOP's nominee it will be a slaughter.