What percent Mormon is the Utah population?
Going by Tinder profiles, too many.
What percent Mormon is the Utah population?
It'll be quite the show if he prevents the candidates from hitting the magic number and it goes to the house.
This guy has a chance (albeit small) of becoming president.
Correct. Barring some absurdly ridiculous turn of events, Utah going to McMullin only further helps Hillary.
If seen some of the evangelicals on my Facebook feed talking about voting for McMullin where they can, in the hopes he'll take enough states to prevent both Clinton and Trump from getting 270.
Dark blue: on ballot
Light blue: Write-in only
Grey: No access to votes
The odds of a deadlock are almost zero. Taking a state away from Trump, that she wasn't likely to win anyway, only helps Hillary under any any logical circumstances. Period.I mean, it's more neutral for Hilary than anything. You need over half the electoral votes to become president, and a republican controlled house won't pick Hilary in the event of a deadlock, so whether Trump or anyone else but her wins a heavy red state makes no difference. McMullin would only be helping Hilary if he split the vote enough for her to win Utah, which is unlikely, but actually not impossible
What I would give to have McMullin appear from nowhere at tonight's debate, rush the stage, coldclock the Trumpster Fire using his CIA operative skills, take the podium, and declare "I'm the Republican nominee now."
Nope if neither win that magic number Vermin supreme will get the nods bruhs his plan is fail proofIt'll be quite the show if he prevents the candidates from hitting the magic number and it goes to the house.
This guy has a chance (albeit small) of becoming president.
He's actually on the ballot in only very few states (he's formally on the ballot in only 84 EV worth of states) and only really campaigning in Utah (Mormon majority) and Idaho (significant Mormon minority):
The odds of a deadlock is almost zero. Taking a state away from Trump, that she wasn't likely to win anyway, only helps Hillary under any any logical circumstances. Period.
It doesn't help Hillary to have Utah go independent since UT never mattered to her, it doesn't help Trump at all though and hurts him as his path requires it.
Sure it does. It takes votes away from Trump. It's not just vote gains for Hillary that help her. Any that can be taken away from Trump have a similar effect.
What I would give to have McMullin appear from nowhere at tonight's debate, rush the stage, coldclock the Trumpster Fire using his CIA operative skills, take the podium, and declare "I'm the Republican nominee now."
It's pretty incredible that, of all people, this nobody who came in to the game so late may be the third party candidate that actually wins a state. Pretty awesome.
Taking away votes from Trump is irrelevant if Hilary doesn't win a state, since the popular vote isn't what decides elections. Third parties aren't spoilers because they win states, they're spoilers because they make states that could've been wins into losses. It hurts Trump (In that it makes it harder to get a majority and might lead to a deadlock), but it doesn't contribute to Hilary's majority at all. This is a case where hurting Trump does not actually equate to helping Hilary
He's actually on the ballot in only very few states (he's formally on the ballot in only 84 EV worth of states) and only really campaigning in Utah (Mormon majority) and Idaho (significant Mormon minority):
Will he be the first in modern times to win a state without running as an explicitly KKK candidate? (George Wallace and Strom Thurmond won states)
I'm not talking popular vote. I'm talking about electoral. Anytime the competition doesn't gain electoral votes in a state they otherwise were going to, helps the other main candidate. Sure it wouldn't net Hillary any extra, but it would keep electoral votes away from Trump that he would have otherwise received.
That's what I thought. I saw someone post an article with the strategy, saying something like "is this feasible??", with a bunch of commenters saying things like "worth a shot!"
It's not going to achieve their goal, but it sounds like it could steal a decent amount of votes in those states.
So would some people voting for Hilary vote for McMullin with them thinking it's better to hurt Trump?
Ok, fair enough.But Hillary winning isn't actually dependent on Trump's number of electoral votes. It is only dependent on her getting at least 270 of the electoral vote. So no, it doesn't help Hillary, because it doesn't contribute to her getting 270. It might help her if there was a chance a potential deadlock would go to her, but there really isn't. Whether Trump has 269 or 263 electoral votes makes no difference, since the relative number of electoral votes is meaningless. Hillary's only path to victory is a majority, and if she gets a majority, than it doesn't matter how large that majority is.
TL;DR: The number of electoral votes Trump gets is not really relevant to a Hillary victory. The only relevant number for a democrat victory is how many electoral votes HILLARY gets.
I'm not talking popular vote. I'm talking about electoral. Anytime the competition doesn't gain electoral votes in a state they otherwise were going to, helps the other main candidate. Sure it wouldn't net Hillary any extra, but it would keep electoral votes away from Trump that he would have otherwise received.
Those morons, voting with their conscience for a third party cand....oh wait now we are okay with it?
Denying Electoral Votes to Trump almost certainly helps Hillary. I don't know why people are so invested in claiming that it isn't helpful to the Clinton campaign unless she wins.
If I am a cornerback and I bat down a pass that was going to be a touchdown otherwise, then I have helped and benefitted my team.
Denying Electoral Votes to Trump almost certainly helps Hillary. I don't know why people are so invested in claiming that it isn't helpful to the Clinton campaign unless she wins.
If I am a cornerback and I bat down a pass that was going to be a touchdown otherwise, then I have helped and benefitted my team.
The difference is that votes relative to the other candidate are irrelevant, since you need more than half of the total electoral votes. If Hilary gets enough to win, it doesn't matter how many Trump has. Only winning a state helps Hillary. Trump losing makes no difference since she is technically not competing directly with Trump. It hurts Trump because it could prevent him from getting to 270. But since Hillary still won't get closer to 270, it makes no difference to her
Why is Romney not endorsing this guy already?
Considering that it's a GOP-held congress, I don't think it even hurts Trump. If they're both denied 270, congress just votes him in after.
If McMuffin can get Utah, do you think the GOP will try to get him to run as their 2020 candidate? Like, game their primary process to make it easy for him to win it.
If McMuffin can get Utah, do you think the GOP will try to get him to run as their 2020 candidate? Like, game their primary process to make it easy for him to win it.
It hurts Trump in that I don't think most of the GOP congressmen like Trump, and there's a chance that a deadlock would go to McMullin instead if it came to that
Considering that it's a GOP-held congress, I don't think it even hurts Trump. If they're both denied 270, congress just votes him in after.
It hurts Trump in that I don't think most of the GOP congressmen like Trump, and there's a chance that a deadlock would go to McMullin instead if it came to that
Step 3: Win in the House
After that, the 12th Amendment dictates that the top three presidential vote-getters’ names are sent to the incoming House, with each state delegation getting one vote. The top two electoral-vote-receiving vice presidential candidates are sent to the Senate.
The Republican Party, of course, enjoys a significant edge in House delegations and controls 33 of the 50 states. While most project them to lose seats in the election, the scenario we’re interested in — in which Trump rebounds to win nearly half of the electoral votes — would probably not be the disaster it would take for the Republicans to lose nine delegations.
Fortunately for McMullin, Republicans haven’t shown Trump a lot of loyalty. Unprecedented numbers of congressional leaders have already abandoned their nominee – and that’s under the working assumption that Clinton is the only alternative.
Moreover, it takes an outright majority at this stage for a candidate to win. Based on known defections, somewhere around 35 congressmen are already anti-Trump (to varying degrees), including a majority of Utah’s delegation, and a majority of the Republicans in Nevada’s.
So let’s say the Democrats pick up a couple of states in the election, while Utah and Nevada go for McMullin and persuade a few other Republican states to join them right away, such that the breakdowns goes something like – with 26 needed to win — 19 delegations for Clinton, 23 for Trump and eight for McMullin.
Now what? Unlike the Electoral College, the House doesn’t just give up — they get to keep going until Inauguration Day. At that point, if the House delegations are still deadlocked, the vice president becomes president.
Meanwhile, the vice president would likely be known. Since the Senate can only choose between the top two candidates (presumably Kaine and Pence), it would take a perfect tie for them to remain deadlocked.
So here’s the rub: Whichever side loses in the Senate might have good reason to make a deal with a McMullin contingent in the House. That is, if Kaine is VP and the McMullin contingent holds fast, the party-loyal Republican coalition may be pressured to accept McMullin as better than Clinton (who would win if McMullin states sided with the Democrats) or Kaine (who would become president if the House remained deadlocked). While if Pence wins in the Senate, the Democrats may be pressured to accept McMullin rather than Trump or Pence — especially if they make deals for political appointments or legislative commitments. While this may sound shady by U.S. norms, it’s not unlike what happens in parliamentary systems around the world.
I don't think it's realistic to expect them to line up behind someone who won a single state. Maybe if he got 8 or so. If opposition to him was that universal in the party they would have done some shady shit to deny him the nomination months ago.
Given that voting for third party is voting for Trump (that's what I learned on this forum), the numbers are actually Trump 63 - Clinton 24. A healthy lead.
McMuffin taking 6 electoral votes from a state Trump was predicted to win would be perfect. Go McMuffin Go!
Just throwing it out there for shits and giggles but...
Lets say no one hits 270. If McMullin wins Utah that means the house can select him as President right?