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Source for info
Candidate---------------------Party----------------Electoral-------Popular
James Buchanan----------Democratic----------174-----------1,838,169
John C. Fremont----------Republican-----------114-----------1,341,264
Millard Fillmore----------American--------------8---------------873,000
Source of info
Party----------Projected wins(EC)------------Undecided(EC)
Democrats-------217----------------------------- 53 --
Republicans-----191------------------------------79
originally posted by: olaru12
I think the GOP will not nominate Trump but will float Jeb as their choice.
Donald will run an ineffectual write in campaign, not 3rd party, and fragment the Republicans.
But all that doesn't matter. Some how, some way Jeb will be sitting in the WH come 2017.
The popular vote is a sham.
originally posted by: Flatfish
originally posted by: olaru12
I think the GOP will not nominate Trump but will float Jeb as their choice.
Donald will run an ineffectual write in campaign, not 3rd party, and fragment the Republicans.
But all that doesn't matter. Some how, some way Jeb will be sitting in the WH come 2017.
The popular vote is a sham.
This is one of those times when I'm gonna have to disagree with you.
I don't think Jeb will ever see the inside of the WH again unless he does so as a tourist or by invitation.
Then again, I don't think we're gonna see any Republican in the WH for quite some time.
But.....I've been wrong before.
originally posted by: DISRAELI
a reply to: hubrisinxs
Not so implausible, because there are other precedents.
To an outside observer, it looks as though the old Democrat party split fatally in 1968 between Humphreys and Wallace. At least before then it used to be taken for granted that "the South is Democrat", and apparently that's not true any more. Hence Nixon, Reagan...
A real split would probably need something more solid than a difference of opinion, perhaps a social or regional basis.
originally posted by: DISRAELI
a reply to: Flatfish
Certainly I believe you! That was the impression I picked up from reading bits of history.
(I must admit your colour-coding system is what confuses me. In my own country, "red" means Socialist, and it is the conservatives who are "true blue").
originally posted by: DISRAELI
a reply to: Flatfish
Certainly I believe you! That was the impression I picked up from reading bits of history.
(I must admit your colour-coding system is what confuses me. In my own country, "red" means Socialist, and it is the conservatives who are "true blue")
People who are perfectly fine with potentially voting for the Republican nominee, even if they voted for Obama twice, will pretty much automatically vote for the Democrat nominee after hearing a Cruz or a Trump in an actual Presidential debate. Especially the social issues aspect.