DesideriScuri
Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: tazzygirl quote:
ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri quote:
ORIGINAL: tazzygirl Keep dreaming. Dreaming? It hasn't happened yet, has it? There was no allusion to a different result from the popular vote, so what was she dreaming about? Following the rules?!? Well.. lets see.... these states are under no legal requirements to cast their electoral votes to the majority winner... No Legal Requirement Electors in these States are not bound by State Law to cast their vote for a specific candidate: ARIZONA ARKANSAS DELAWARE 3 GEORGIA IDAHO ILLINOIS 20 INDIANA IOWA 6 KANSAS KENTUCKY LOUISIANA MINNESOTA 10 MISSOURI NEW HAMPSHIRE 4 NEW JERSEY 14 NEW YORK 29 NORTH DAKOTA PENNSYLVANIA RHODE ISLAND SOUTH DAKOTA TENNESSEE TEXAS UTAH WEST VIRGINIA http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/electoral-college/electors.html#restrictions Those with a number beside them, Obama won as a majority. Now, considering it would require 64.... yes... 64... would have to vote against the majority in their state. The numbers are there. The probability isnt. As of the 2008 presidential election, there has been only one occasion when faithless electors prevented an expected winner from winning the electoral college vote: in December 1836, twenty-three faithless electors prevented Richard Mentor Johnson, the expected candidate, from winning the Vice Presidency. However, Johnson was promptly elected Vice President by the U.S. Senate in February 1837; therefore, faithless electors have never changed the expected final outcome of the entire election process. He is the next President. And, what was said, was that technically he hasn't won YET (and, searching4mysir even all-cap'ed YET, most likely implying that it is going to happen). Since the Electoral College elector's have yet to have their votes tallied according to the rules, Obama is not the next President of the US. At no point did searching imply that he might not be the next one, only that, according to the rules, he hasn't won it yet. And, as likely or unlikely the odds of enough electors to vote against their State's voters, the fact that it hasn't happened yet stills means that it hasn't happened yet. If the next bus stops at your bust stop at 5:10 pm, it's only 5:05 pm, and you have confirmed that the bus is, in fact, on it's way to your stop, does that mean the bus has already stopped at your bus stop?
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What I support: - A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
- Personal Responsibility
- Help for the truly needy
- Limited Government
- Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)
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