You're assuming that everyone in Arizona who voted Libertarian was actually libertarian. I don't think that's the case. You bring up all the Ls on the ticket except one, the one at the top of the ticket who was actually an experienced, well-qualified candidate. In Arizona, Johnson got 1.4% of the vote statewide. The Libertarian in the US Senate race got 4.5%. Something doesn't add up.
My theory is that AZ, statewide, is about 2% Libertarian. The congressional races you cited were very competitive and were almost exclusively negative advertising. I think a significant number of NON-libertarians got pissed at the negativity in those races and voted Libertarian as a protest vote. I think that's why the L numbers swelled statewide, especially in the competitive races.
What do you think?
Arizona is very Libertarian. There are three other strong Libertarian states: Washington, New Hampshire, and Georgia. I think most of those votes were true Libertarians.
we had an election, ron paul won.
romney got the votes at the convention insead of ron.
The GOP doesn't follow rules to elect their candidates. they just pick them when the votes don't go the way they want.
The LP follows the rules, even when it would benefit them to do otherwise.
One group is criminal, the other is not.
The LP has no control over who gets on the ballot as a libertarian, the GOP has full control.
what are you talking about?
LOL Everyone in this thread is talking about congressional elections/elected office, then you out of nowhere bring up conventions and delegates and whatnot. I see what you're trying to say, but in a way it's apples and oranges.
You're saying when the GOP picks delegates the GOP doesn't like, it replaces them willy nilly. Yes, we know. But this is irrelevant as far as this thread goes. When the GOP holds primary elections for public office, they can't replace the eventual nominee. Ever heard the name Todd Akin before?
If you oppose abortion, then you shouldn't be voting LP. Period.It won't be the first time you question your vote after the fact. What you decide is the best person for your district is YOUR decision.
I actually regret voting for Gary Johnson as all it did was strengthen the proabortionist libertarians and their belief that their way is the way for the RP movement. I won't make that mistake ever again.
As I said, I won't make that mistake again unless the condidate respects ALL life.If you oppose abortion, then you shouldn't be voting LP. Period.
Care to explain why you think that? You really think statewide Libertarians in AZ would give GJ 1.4% of the vote, while giving their Senate candidate 4.5? How would you explain the difference?
Gary Johnson was distasteful to many libertarians for his stances on Iran.
Arizona is very Libertarian. (compared to most states) and 1.4% is better than most states. The Ron Paul R3VOLution sign and logo was originally designed by Arizonans.
Gary Johnson was distasteful to many libertarians for his stances on Iran.
Arizona is very Libertarian. (compared to most states) and 1.4% is better than most states. The Ron Paul R3VOLution sign and logo was originally designed by Arizonans.
You're assuming that everyone in Arizona who voted Libertarian was actually libertarian. I don't think that's the case. You bring up all the Ls on the ticket except one, the one at the top of the ticket who was actually an experienced, well-qualified candidate. In Arizona, Johnson got 1.4% of the vote statewide. The Libertarian in the US Senate race got 4.5%. Something doesn't add up.
My theory is that AZ, statewide, is about 2% Libertarian. The congressional races you cited were very competitive and were almost exclusively negative advertising. I think a significant number of NON-libertarians got pissed at the negativity in those races and voted Libertarian as a protest vote. I think that's why the L numbers swelled statewide, especially in the competitive races.
What do you think?
A little research shows that Vernon Parker is a neocon war hawk (but I repeat myself), backed by both Bush Sr. and John McCain. Those LP voters would never have cast a ballot for Parker, whether or not an LP candidate was on the ballot.
In California, the two Parties have fixed it so that there are only two names on the Ballot in the General Election. In some contests, it's two Democrats in the General (which worked out well by eliminating Pete Stark).
I chose to leave some contests blank, instead of voting for the lesser of the two evils, but most people probably felt obliged to vote for one when there were only two choices.
Thank God AZ rejected the awful Top Two Primary! I was so afraid that would pass.
Riiiight.
Lucky for AZ, they had California to tell them how that worked out! There are certainly better options than the top-two Primary.
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If we apportion the LP votes in the chart along the lines of that 53%-38%-10% split, then–as best as I can calculate–there are no spoilers in the chart above. Obviously, there are reasons to believe that the 53-38-10 formula is flawed, but (unlike the implied 100-0-0 number people sometimes use to divvy up third-party votes), at least it's based on real polling data.
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UPDATE: Scratch Kerry Bentivolito off that Kos list of losing Republicans. As FoxNews.com explains, "On the same day Bentivolio won a two-year seat in the 113th Congress which starts next year, [Democrat David] Curson simultaneously won a special election to finish [outgoing Rep. Thad] McCotter's term during the lame duck session."