Wow. Thought he would fight til the bitter end even if he didn't get much support.
Quote from: Thunder on February 20, 2016, 07:47:20 PMWow. Thought he would fight til the bitter end even if he didn't get much support.I won't be surprise if he lines up behind Rubio within two weeks.
What GOP primaries are left anyway?
The Bush is down, now lets hope to god the Clinton is next. Please.
Quote from: Jono on February 21, 2016, 12:53:27 AMThe Bush is down, now lets hope to god the Clinton is next. Please.yeah, it would sure make a lot of sense if the front-running democratic candidate were to just drop out randomly, right in the midst of her dominating campaign where she has no real competitionlet's waste our time and energy hoping for that
Clinton just won Nevada and it's more of a sigh of relief if anything. If she lost that, she'd be in trouble, but her safety is in the older people and blacks. Bernie has the college kids.
As far as I know she has been barely keeping ahead against Bernie. Weren't the caucus' extremely close?
Apparently the Unions supporting Clinton gave their employees paid time off to leave work and go vote for Clinton.
Please clap
Quote from: Pip on February 21, 2016, 01:46:59 AMAs far as I know she has been barely keeping ahead against Bernie. Weren't the caucus' extremely close?Yes and no - depends on the demographics.Sanders biggest problem is his base of young voters that are so loud in online polls and forums and websites. They support Sanders by an overwhelming amount (80+ percent) - the problem is that they are not reliable voters for elections. And when his base does not come out and voter turnout is low, like how it was in Nevada, the whole message of Sanders starting a "political revolution" falls flat on it's ass.Sanders other issue is with the minority voters - especially blacks, who supported Clinton in Nevada overwhelmingly. And as we go into more diverse states like South Carolina and Texas, Sanders is facing an uphill battle to try and get his message into key communities that, by the looks of it, do not want him.
Quote from: Icy on February 21, 2016, 12:37:07 PMQuote from: Pip on February 21, 2016, 01:46:59 AMAs far as I know she has been barely keeping ahead against Bernie. Weren't the caucus' extremely close?Yes and no - depends on the demographics.Sanders biggest problem is his base of young voters that are so loud in online polls and forums and websites. They support Sanders by an overwhelming amount (80+ percent) - the problem is that they are not reliable voters for elections. And when his base does not come out and voter turnout is low, like how it was in Nevada, the whole message of Sanders starting a "political revolution" falls flat on it's ass.Sanders other issue is with the minority voters - especially blacks, who supported Clinton in Nevada overwhelmingly. And as we go into more diverse states like South Carolina and Texas, Sanders is facing an uphill battle to try and get his message into key communities that, by the looks of it, do not want him.Yeah, but it still looks like Hillary is doing everything possible. While Sanders hasn't done as much.Imagine if Sanders were to go all out.
Quote from: Pip on February 21, 2016, 03:14:54 PMQuote from: Icy on February 21, 2016, 12:37:07 PMQuote from: Pip on February 21, 2016, 01:46:59 AMAs far as I know she has been barely keeping ahead against Bernie. Weren't the caucus' extremely close?Yes and no - depends on the demographics.Sanders biggest problem is his base of young voters that are so loud in online polls and forums and websites. They support Sanders by an overwhelming amount (80+ percent) - the problem is that they are not reliable voters for elections. And when his base does not come out and voter turnout is low, like how it was in Nevada, the whole message of Sanders starting a "political revolution" falls flat on it's ass.Sanders other issue is with the minority voters - especially blacks, who supported Clinton in Nevada overwhelmingly. And as we go into more diverse states like South Carolina and Texas, Sanders is facing an uphill battle to try and get his message into key communities that, by the looks of it, do not want him.Yeah, but it still looks like Hillary is doing everything possible. While Sanders hasn't done as much.Imagine if Sanders were to go all out.He is - he outspent Hilary in January in advertisements and such. It's not like Bernie is just sitting around.