Topic: New Hampshire Predictions | |
---|---|
Ok, this is bound to
ruffle a few feathers, but I'm going out on a limb here and make some predictions about the New Hampshire Primary. Mitt Romney's campaign is on life support. Why? Because Romney comes off as a stiff, like Frankenstein. He represents Big Money and people don't like him. Rudy Guiliani won't make a strong showing. Running on his 9/11 record won't help him much. Voters need more than that. Also, voters don't like him for various reasons such as keeping a mistress on taxpayers money. John McCain's campaign is ascendant in New Hampshire, voters and the press like him and here he will probably deliver for the Republicans. Mike Huckabee, though he won Iowa, won't win New Hampshire. Why? Because there were more religious fundamentalist in Iowa than in New Hampshire, so the cult of personality he had there won't help him a lot here. However, he could still make a strong showing because I think people basically like him. Fred Thompson barely registers a pulse. I predict New Hampshire will be his last caucus state and that he will shortly drop out of the race. Ron Paul's only chance of staying in the Presidential race is to drop out of the Republican race and run on an Independent ticket. As an Independent he could be a spoiler. On the Democrat side Hillary Clinton will not win in New Hampshire. It's mainly because of the baggage she carries and that baggage is named Bill. That steely exterior is starting to crack. Not a good sign. Voters in New Hampshire (and other places) want change and not more of the same despite how she tries to spin it. Barack Obama will win New Hampshire for the Democrats. He is intelligent, communicates well with voters and has that 'cult of personality'. John Edwards. Hard to predict. He'll do better than Hillary but not as good as Obama. |
|
|
|
My vote's on Huckabee.
|
|
|
|
McCain by a ton.
As for Democrats, I think there are a lot of Edwards supporters who were afraid to come out and support him until he had more widespread support. But after Iowa, they see that he's actually in the race. I still predict Obama takes it, but by a razor thin margin over Edwards |
|
|
|
Fair comment
|
|
|
|
Freedom of choice.
That's what it's all about. Funny thing about predictions, you can always be wrong. But I think at least some of them will come to pass. |
|
|
|
Ok, I was wrong
about Obama, Hillary and John Edwards. Who knew? But I was right about McCain. All bets are off in this race, though I think it's more likely than ever that a Presidential candidate could win by default. This is known as the Perot effect. In 1992 Ross Perot, a businessman from Texas, made an attempt at the presidency as a third party candidate. He received 19% of the popular vote and is blamed, or thanked, for allowing Bill Clinton to become President. (Source: Newsvine.com) Let's say, just for the sake of argument, that Ron Paul decided to run as an Independent. If enough people voted for him, (maybe Independents and disaffected Republicans or Democrats), it could draw away votes from Republican and/or Democratic candidates, leading to a win for the other party. A shrewd party strategist might find a way to tap into this disaffection in order to draw away votes from the other side. Sounds evil, but politics is that way. Before that happens, some of the candidates will drop out of the race because either their money has run out, or the party nominee has been decided. Any thoughts? |
|
|
|
That's entirely true, and that's why America needs to switch to a run-off election style, rather than first past the post. The Iowa Caucuses already use a similar type approach, weeding out candidates with little or no support in an effort to get people to cast their vote for a candidate who actually has a shot at winning. If you take the cumulation of the small percentage votes for Kucinich, Richardson, etc. and assumed (unrealistically, but hypothetically) that these people would have voted for Obama if it were a 2 person race, then The overall result may have been different.
|
|
|