Pretty sure this site has been around since George HW Bush's second term. And while Bernie Sanders has been around since the Cretaceous, I don't think it was his idea.This has to be a Bernie backed viral marketing tool.
Pretty sure this site has been around since George HW Bush's second term. And while Bernie Sanders has been around since the Cretaceous, I don't think it was his idea.This has to be a Bernie backed viral marketing tool.
The Internet only cares about legitimacy, not electability. Ron Paul was never going to win, but he was as legit as a politician could be. Same with Bernie here.Yeah I distinctly remember doing this last election and getting Ron Paul.
Incidentally, I find it interesting that last election, the "Internet's Candidate" was Ron Paul, while this election its Bernie Sanders. It seems like their policies are pretty opposite though.
Probably a whole lot of write-ins, dividing their way into a Clinton victory, then another fun trip to the supreme court for election fraud accusation shenanigans.I have a question and please bear with me.
I started thinking about this at breakfast. What if the relationship between Trump and Clinton could be a factor in the presidential election. What if his whole campaign, which has been described as destructive to the GOP, is a favor for his friends The Clintons to get Hillary into office? They attended The Donald's wedding. Ivanka and Chelsea are good friends. And no, I'm not serious about this like some crazed conspiracy theorist. It did, however, make me curious about how having a major party nominee drop out right before the election would be handled.
What would happen if, for whatever reason, a GOP or Dem nominee for POTUS dropped out at the last minute?
Having him drop out at the last minute would be a terrible plan. A far more successful plan would be for him to be a bigoted cartoon, to the point that there's no sane way he could become the GOP nominee, and then run as an independent against the real nominee to split the vote.I have a question and please bear with me.
I started thinking about this at breakfast. What if the relationship between Trump and Clinton could be a factor in the presidential election. What if his whole campaign, which has been described as destructive to the GOP, is a favor for his friends The Clintons to get Hillary into office? They attended The Donald's wedding. Ivanka and Chelsea are good friends. And no, I'm not serious about this like some crazed conspiracy theorist. It did, however, make me curious about how having a major party nominee drop out right before the election would be handled.
What would happen if, for whatever reason, a GOP or Dem nominee for POTUS dropped out at the last minute?
That does make the most sense. Do you happen to know if there is a precedent? If you don't know, it's not a big deal since it's only to satisfy my curiosity.If a GOP nominee dropped out/died/whatever at the last minute, their vice president would become the main ticket.
A presidential candidate has never died/dropped out before an election to date. However, two vice presidential candidates have (1 died, 1 left the ticket).That does make the most sense. Do you happen to know if there is a precedent? If you don't know, it's not a big deal since it's only to satisfy my curiosity.
They were simply replaced since running mates are chosen, not picked as a result of voting. However, the Party of the candidate does need to convene to officially select a new vice presidential candidate.Vacancies of Vice-Presidential CandidatesIn 1912, James Sherman, the Republican candidate for Vice-President (and the incumbent Vice-President under William Howard Taft) died on October 30 of kidney disease, a few days before the general election on November 5. The Republican National Committee scheduled a meeting to be held after the general election, on November 12, to select a successor, and Sherman's name remained on the ticket for the general election. The Republicans lost, however (the Democratic ticket of Woodrow Wilson and Thomas Marshall won), and decided on November 8 not to meet as they had planned because voters only chose eight Republican electors, in Vermont and Utah. These electors did meet later, however, and, acting without instructions from the RNC, voted to replace Sherman's name on the ticket with that of Columbia University President Nicholas Butler of New York. This was a purely formal act with no practical consequences for the election.
During the 1972 presidential campaign, Democrat Thomas Eagleton was Senator George McGovern's vice-presidential running mate for only 18 days. Eagleton dropped out of the race acknowledging that he had been hospitalized three times in the 1960s for depression and stress, and that he had undergone electric shock therapy. McGovern selected the Peace Corps Director, Sargent Shriver, to replace Eagleton, but to actually place Shriver on the ticket, the Democratic National Committee met and chose him in the first week of August. The Democrats lost the general election in November to the Republican candidates, Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew.
I laughed so damn hard."I'm gonna DEVOUR THIS BABY for you, Mr. Trump!"
I don't think Wisconsin is a "small scale", personally.Everyone loves the joke, until the joke wins. Then it's a goddamn disaster. I've seen it on a small scale, really don't want to see it on the national one.
That's not the small scale I was thinking of. Remember, this moron state voted for that twat 3 times, twice after the joke stopped being funny.I don't think Wisconsin is a "small scale", personally.
No surprise, considering the Koch Brothers have a stake in most voting machine manufacturers.That's not the small scale I was thinking off. Remember, this moron state voted for that twat 3 times, twice after the joke stopped being funny.
I didn't realize SELD-M-BREAK was a Koch company...No surprise, considering the Koch Brothers have a stake in most voting machine manufacturers.
Try these on.
Look, you crazy mother...
Put these on.
HEY, stay away from me!
I'm telling you you dumb sunnobitch!
...but with Gary Busey.Someone needs to go the extra step and take it this far:
No, no.No.
Oldman forever.
Yeah I mean his campaign has basically been operating on IOUs for the last several weeks.Rick Perry announced that he's out. Not a huge surprise, but he's the first major candidate to bow out.
One down, fourteen to go!