A 21-year-old woman (millennial) explains why she's voting for Johnson. (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
June 12, 2024, 06:09:09 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Election Archive
  Election Archive
  2016 U.S. Presidential Election
  A 21-year-old woman (millennial) explains why she's voting for Johnson. (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: A 21-year-old woman (millennial) explains why she's voting for Johnson.  (Read 2066 times)
IceAgeComing
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,588
United Kingdom


« on: October 22, 2016, 09:08:30 AM »

a sensible economic policy, a sensible foreign policy, a sensible approach to social issues like health and education and housing.

everyone wants these things; to suggest that those of us on the left (or indeed on the right, although I think that the solutions that they propose are totally wrong), the whole point of politics is that we disagree what exactly a "sensible economic policy" means.  To say that its only boring centrists that have "a sensible economic policy" is quite frankly rather insulting; especially when the default centrist position always seems to be "lets not rock the boat and keep things as they are!!!!". 

Besides any significant third party of the middle won't rise under America's system; since it'd need to get more than 40% in a particular state or district to get representation; and if it couldn't do that then it'd find its vote getting squeezed in every marginal election due to the whole spoiler effect thing.  If America moved towards better ways of electing their politicians (PR for the House and maybe also the Senate as well, national popular vote using AV for the Presidency) then you might see a centre party emerge but it'd be along with other smaller groups on the left and the right, and honestly who knows whether it'd actually manage to stay popular; liberal parties in Europe (who are almost exclusively parties of the centre) have had huge amounts of trouble in recent years losing lots of votes - look at the Lib Dems in the UK or the FDP in Germany (who probably aren't really a party of the centre, but they're seen as such) along with more parties of the populist left and right getting representation.  Why should it be assumed that there are this huge amount of "centrists" who'd back that sort of party in America?
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.017 seconds with 11 queries.