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This sure helped Hillary, didn't it?
Message
From
17/12/2016 03:07:33
 
 
To
13/12/2016 13:55:42
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Elections
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01644975
Message ID:
01645412
Views:
56
>
>I have a theoretical question (for anyone who's interested). In theory (though admittedly, never in practice), someone could win the electoral vote with as little as about 22% of the popular vote. Is there any value at which you would say that, whether it's our historical system or not, the difference between the popular vote and the electoral vote is so large that it casts doubt on the legitimacy of the outcome? If the answer is yes, what is that value?

I'm interested to know if you think NPR would have published that article, had HRC won the electoral college but not the popular vote.

This isn't about the legitimacy of the electoral college - neither you nor any other person was presenting these "stats" before the election. The motive is obvious. Your candidate lost, the candidate you detest won, and you (and others) are trying everything to undercut the victory.

As for the contents of the article itself, they hammer their own argument with this statement: "And let's be clear about the obvious here: This kind of an extreme election isn't going to happen"

When I look at the combination of states they mentioned - the notion that someone would take those combinations of states but lose all others - well, that's a real work of fiction.
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