nobody's_hero
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2008
- Messages
- 10,909
The more the merrier, I say. I'm still uneasy of the idea that opponents dropping out early means their support will consolidate around some candidate other than Ron Paul.
For example, if it is a fairly close 10-way race (say, we had 10 candidates, which would not be far-fetched for this election cycle), then Ron Paul would only need about 11% to win the nomination. If everyone starts dropping out, and it becomes a two-way race, then Ron Paul needs 51% of the votes to win the nomination.
(it isn't quite that simple but you get my point)
For example, if it is a fairly close 10-way race (say, we had 10 candidates, which would not be far-fetched for this election cycle), then Ron Paul would only need about 11% to win the nomination. If everyone starts dropping out, and it becomes a two-way race, then Ron Paul needs 51% of the votes to win the nomination.
(it isn't quite that simple but you get my point)