Londo_Jowo
Lifer
I admit, I was one of the voters that voted for Ross Perot. That was the first and last time I voted for a 3rd party candidate. In hind sight I wished I had voted for GHW Bush like I did in 1988.
OK, Please Mr. Eskimospy you have twice cited exit polls in the discussion but didn't link them. Would you pretty, pretty please with sugar on top provide links to information you cite?
Was that better ninja?
Published: August 26, 1992
President Bush's gains from four days in the spotlight at the Republican National Convention have almost completely evaporated, as the President failed to convince the public that he is committed to change and to reviving the economy, the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll shows.
Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas re-established a strong lead, holding a 51 percent to 36 percent edge in the poll, which was taken Sunday and Monday. That is about the same margin he held before last week's convention.
The poll showed the public had far more interest in hearing about Mr. Clinton's favorite issues, the economy and health care, than in topics featured at the convention, like family values and homosexuality.
The survey of 903 registered voters also provided fresh evidence of the loose allegiances of voters this year, showing that large numbers of men, young people, the poor and the financially comfortable all shifted back and forth in the last two weeks.
This
Bob Dole defeated Bob Dole, because Bob Dole should have realized that his time had passed and Bob Dole should have stepped asside. But Bob Dole was a typical republican and held fast that it was Bob Dole's rightful turn.
Ross Perots presence on the 1992 presidential ballot did not change the outcome of the election, according to an analysis of the second choices of Perot supporters.
The analysis, based on exit polls conducted by Voter Research & Surveys (VRS) for the major news organizations, indicated that in Perots absence, only Ohio would have have shifted from the Clinton column to the Bush column. This would still have left Clinton with a healthy 349-to-189 majority in the electoral college.
And even in Ohio, the hypothetical Bush margin without Perot in the race was so small that given the normal margin of error in polls, the state still might have stuck with Clinton absent the Texas billionaire.
In most states, the second choices of Perot voters only reinforced the actual outcome. For example, California, New York, Illinois and Oregon went to Clinton by large margins, and Perot voters in those states strongly preferred Clinton to Bush.
You will need university access to get the actual exit polls from that long ago. There are quite a number of news stories about them however, at least one of which was already linked and I'm sure you've seen it. Are you for some reason of the belief that this news story was lying?
Nope, just that I disagree with it.
This topic actually surprised me. Like others, I had fallen victim to this popular misconception. It also was repeated in a recent program I watched (the American Experience Clinton biography?).
A relevant quote from the Washington Post which appeared in a Salon article last year:
Ross Perot caused SNL to be funnier for a while.
I have no idea why anyone in their right mind could think Perot took more votes from Bush 41 since Perot's platform was to the left of Clinton's.
Ross Perot caused SNL to be funnier for a while.
The exit polls don't take into account the damage that the Perot run for the presidency did to the Bush presidency and his campaign. From my own experience with Perot supporters, the people that voted for him and the media bombardment of his message it's still my opinion the Bush would have been re-elected if Perot hadn't run.
It really is a fairly widespread myth. I used to think it myself until I read more about the topic.
If it's your decision to cling to an unshakable faith in Republican victory that's fine, but I encourage you to read this analysis of the 1992 election that encompasses a wide range of pre-election polling, presidential approval, etc.
http://www.pollingreport.com/hibbitts1202.htm
All the evidence points to a Bush defeat regardless. Using Perot as the cause is a right wing myth to excuse two consecutive widespread presidential defeats for conservatives.
Since Tim Hibbitts works for Fox news then maybe I should believe his take on the election, but my memory still disagrees, it was 20 years ago after all.
He actually works for his own polling firm, but is occasionally contracted by a number of networks to provide coverage on election projections, etc.
OK, Please Mr. Eskimospy you have twice cited exit polls in the discussion but didn't link them. Would you pretty, pretty please with sugar on top provide links to information you cite?
Was that better ninja?
Ross Perot caused SNL to be funnier for a while.
And fuck Romney for whining and being butthurt over an election from 20 years ago he wasn't even involved in.
Romney really is a bad candidate. 20 years ago, Romney was an "independent" during Reagan/Bush. He doesn't want to go back to Reagan/Bush. The ads just write themselves.