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ups.com... SNIP The fact is that in every election there are several groups: 1) Those who will vote Republican no matter what 2) Those who will vote Democrat no matter what 3) Those who won't vote, or will vote for a 3rd party candidate with absolutely no real chance of winning, no matter what 4) Those who are truly independent, and who may vote Democrat, Republican, 3rd party, or not at all, depending on a wide variety of factors, and whose votes really can decide an election. Successful campaigning is all about identifying the 4th group, and getting them to vote for your candidate. 73 de Jim, N2EY Not quite that simple. I would agree with all of the above where both parties present a candidate that is "reasonable" across a broad brush of party faithfuls. Where things go wrong is when a candidate goes beyond the point of reasonableness on one or more issues as judged by others in the party. Yes, there are many people who "appear" to be in groups 1 or 2, but **** any of them off and they too will jump ship and either not vote at all (many people vote put don't vote for all possible positions on a ballot), they'll vote for a 3rd party...or write-in Mickey Mouse... or they'll vote for the other party's candidate as many Dems did by voting for Reagan in 80 and 84. One other variable on a 4 year basis. From one presidential election to the next, there is a considerable loss of existing voters who have died and an influx of "new" voters who have reached 18 years of age, become naturalized citizens or just finally registered to vote for the first time. Far more people today as new voters tend to view themselves as "independents" rather than being staunch democrats or republicans. Cheers, Bill |
"robert casey" wrote in message nk.net... JAMES HAMPTON wrote: SNIP Voting 3rd party is like giving it to the Republicans, so I won't vote 3rd party. Not always the case. Bush senior lost to Clinton because of a 3rd Party (Perot). Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 06:44:11 GMT, robert casey wrote:
You seriously think that they'd select someone who actually understands the physics of radio in charge of the FCC? Get real.... Yet the best chairman that the agency had was Dick Wiley, who was there in the mid-1970s. Although he was and still is a top-notch communications lawyer, he had a very good engineering advisor and he listened to what the latter told him. He sat in on a seminar that I was co-chairing on TV technical standards, and from the few questions that he raised we could all see that he was understanding a lot of what we were discussing. Unfortunately, his Carter=era successor (Charlie Ferris, who was Tip O'Neill's bag carrier) brought in the economists and "policy" types, downplayed the engineers, and the succeeding chairmen were even worse. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
"Bill Sohl" wrote in message ink.net... "robert casey" wrote in message nk.net... JAMES HAMPTON wrote: SNIP Voting 3rd party is like giving it to the Republicans, so I won't vote 3rd party. Not always the case. Bush senior lost to Clinton because of a 3rd Party (Perot). Cheers, Bill K2UNK And Perot made a remarkably strong showing for a 3rd Party candidate. If I remember correctly, it's the strongest one in my lifetime and was more far above the number actually needed to tip the win away from the Republicans. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Unfortunately, his Carter=era successor (Charlie Ferris, who was Tip O'Neill's bag carrier) brought in the economists and "policy" types, downplayed the engineers, and the succeeding chairmen were even worse. ONe example of this was AM stereo. Instead of picking one of 5 or so proposed systems as the standard, they said "let the marketplace decide". With 5 possible selections, the net result was that AM stereo was stillborn. When stereo sound for TV was proposed, the EIA (electronics industry association) got together and hammered out just one proposal to submit to the FCC. And the FCC said "okay, you can do it". The EIA did essentially what the FCC should have done, but with the AM stereo disaster, the EIA knew that the only way the FCC couldn't screw it up was to present only one proposal. SO that's what was done. |
Bill Sohl wrote: wrote in message ups.com... SNIP The fact is that in every election there are several groups: 1) Those who will vote Republican no matter what 2) Those who will vote Democrat no matter what 3) Those who won't vote, or will vote for a 3rd party candidate with absolutely no real chance of winning, no matter what 4) Those who are truly independent, and who may vote Democrat, Republican, 3rd party, or not at all, depending on a wide variety of factors, and whose votes really can decide an election. Successful campaigning is all about identifying the 4th group, and getting them to vote for your candidate. 73 de Jim, N2EY Not quite that simple. I would agree with all of the above where both parties present a candidate that is "reasonable" across a broad brush of party faithfuls. Where things go wrong is when a candidate goes beyond the point of reasonableness on one or more issues as judged by others in the party. We're saying the same things, Bill. If someone can be swayed, they're not in group 1 or group 2. Yes, there are many people who "appear" to be in groups 1 or 2, but **** any of them off and they too will jump ship and either not vote at all (many people vote put don't vote for all possible positions on a ballot), they'll vote for a 3rd party...or write-in Mickey Mouse... or they'll vote for the other party's candidate as many Dems did by voting for Reagan in 80 and 84. Those folks aren't/weren't in Group 1 or 2, that's all. Note that in terms of the popular vote, those elections weren't landslides. But the popular vote doesn't determine presidential elections. One other variable on a 4 year basis. From one presidential election to the next, there is a considerable loss of existing voters who have died and an influx of "new" voters who have reached 18 years of age, become naturalized citizens or just finally registered to vote for the first time. Far more people today as new voters tend to view themselves as "independents" rather than being staunch democrats or republicans. Good point! And the point I saw somewhere about 3rd parties is a good one, too. Ross Perot effectively handed the election to Clinton, because he drew so many more votes from Bush I and Dole than he did from Clinton. In 2000 the shoe was on the other foot as Nader drew far more votes from AlGore than from Shrub. Which was truly ironic because Nader, of the Green Party, managed to put a former oil man into the White House. Note that the Green Party didn't back him in 2004! But my basic point is the same: Successful campaigning consists of identifying those voters who you can swing to your favor (which may not mean that they vote for you!) *and* who are in places where their votes can make a difference. In 2004, it was all about getting Ohioans riled up about gay marriage. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
"Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "Bill Sohl" wrote in message ink.net... "robert casey" wrote in message nk.net... JAMES HAMPTON wrote: SNIP Voting 3rd party is like giving it to the Republicans, so I won't vote 3rd party. Not always the case. Bush senior lost to Clinton because of a 3rd Party (Perot). Cheers, Bill K2UNK And Perot made a remarkably strong showing for a 3rd Party candidate. If I remember correctly, it's the strongest one in my lifetime and was more far above the number actually needed to tip the win away from the Republicans. And he may not be a diplomat, but he gives a good pep rally and sure was right about that "sucking sound" created by NAFTA! ak |
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