stevedasbach
Member
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2007
- Messages
- 1,392
I disagree. This is a deceitful political tactic to disenfranchise Ron Paul supporters, who shouldn't be faulted. The pro-life vote was really a coalition of all the other candidates. The fact that all delegates are nominally undecided is just sophistry.
Consider this. Were this tactic implemented in every state, then candidate A, with 40% of the people's support, could conceivably be taken out of the race in the first stage by a coalition of canidates B-G, each with 10% support. That violates the principles of our representative democracy and is like something out of a third world sham election.
How many times have Ron Paul supporters posted that we want all the neocons to remain in the race spliting the vote so that Paul can will with a small plurality. How is that different?
Is it a "violation of our representative democracy" that Thompson stayed in the race for South Carolina, probably taking votes that would have otherwise gone to Huckabee and enabling McCain to win?
The other side used a legitimate tactic against us in Louisiana. Once the provisional ballots are counted, we'll have a better idea how successful it was.