John McCain is surging in the polls. Huge numbers.

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famicommander

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#1 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts
Here are the poll numbers from 9/5/08-9/7/08: USA Today: McCain 54%, Obama 44% (McCain+10) Gallup: McCain 49%, Obama 44% (McCain+5) ABC News: McCain 49%, Obama 47% (McCain+2) CBS News: McCain 46%, Obama 44% (McCain+2) Rasmussen: McCain 48%, Obama 47% (McCain+1) CNN: McCain 48%, Obama 48% (tie) Hotline: McCain 44%, Obama 44% (tie) Source Compare those results with the ones from just after the Democratic National Convention, and we can see that McCain got a much larger bump from the Republican National Convention and Sarah Palin than Obama did from the DNC and Biden. McCain jumped as much as 17 points in the USA Today poll. Accoring to Rasmussen, we should see the effects of the two conventions begin to wear off by Wednesday or Thursday. That will give us a better idea of who the real front-runner will be in November. In any case, this is great news for Sen. McCain.
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Pittfan666

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#3 Pittfan666
Member since 2003 • 8638 Posts
Since when are polls accurate?
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SuperVegeta518

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#4 SuperVegeta518
Member since 2005 • 5960 Posts
I didn't trust polls when Obama was in the lead and I still don't trust polls.
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194197844077667059316682358889

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#5 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts
Awesome, love to see McCain ahead in the polls; that will discourage his supporters from actually coming out to vote since he's "obviously going to win anyway" :P
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ferrari2001

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#6 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts
yea, McCain got a slightly larger jump in the polls than Obama did after the Convention. Mostly because of Palin's epic speech.
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ElZilcho90

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#7 ElZilcho90
Member since 2006 • 6157 Posts

Out of context here, but what if Jon Stewart was the moderator for one of these debates?

That'd be epic.

Scarker

It'd be a pathetic display has he'd take every opportunity to grovel at the feet of Obama and snipe at McCain.

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-Y2J-

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#8 -Y2J-
Member since 2005 • 1000 Posts

Out of context here, but what if Jon Stewart was the moderator for one of these debates?

That'd be epic.

Scarker

his shows covering the rnc were epic.

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Hungry_bunny

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#9 Hungry_bunny
Member since 2006 • 14293 Posts
Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.
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famicommander

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#10 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts
Since when are polls accurate?Pittfan666
Individual polls generally aren't very accurate. But the RealClearPolitics compilation of polls has a very long history of successfully predicting presidents, senators, governors, and other such offices.
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famicommander

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#11 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts
Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.Hungry_bunny
A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.
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Scarker

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#12 Scarker
Member since 2008 • 1433 Posts
[QUOTE="Scarker"]

Out of context here, but what if Jon Stewart was the moderator for one of these debates?

That'd be epic.

ElZilcho90

It'd be a pathetic display has he'd take every opportunity to grovel at the feet of Obama and snipe at McCain.

Not the comedian Jon Stewart; him actually moderating, because he could be quite the hardhitter (if you've read his notes on the MSM you would see it). Of course, he wouldn't even consider it unless both candidates rebut each other with questions that were serious, and issue-based [not open-ended statements]. Then again, when's the last time we actually had two politicians debate each other one-on-one without just answering questions. Meh, McCain wouldn't agree to that anyway.

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deactivated-57af49c27f4e8

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#13 deactivated-57af49c27f4e8
Member since 2005 • 14149 Posts
yea, McCain got a slightly larger jump in the polls than Obama did after the Convention. Mostly because of Palin's epic speech.ferrari2001
If people listen to half truths, it might have been.
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msi276

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#14 msi276
Member since 2007 • 1400 Posts
If he wins Im leaving this ******* country. I cant take 4 more years of Bush.
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Hungry_bunny

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#15 Hungry_bunny
Member since 2006 • 14293 Posts

A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.famicommander
I suppose everything's relative then, I know it's been close so far but lots of stuff has happened this last week that have stirred up a lot of emotions, when people have calmed down a bit the numbers will probably change again...

Or something else could happen that will give it another boost in some direction >_> but the numbers are still very hard to trust when it comes to predictions.

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ElZilcho90

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#17 ElZilcho90
Member since 2006 • 6157 Posts

If he wins Im leaving this ******* country. I cant take 4 more years of Bush.msi276

I'll be holding you to it.

Like all those folks who said they'd leave America if Bush won in 04... yet are still hanging around. I'm looking at you, Robert Redford.

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SOTE

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#18 SOTE
Member since 2004 • 3398 Posts

they are both bad and they should feel bad. Polls mean nothing. Americans have an attention span of a gold fish and I am basing this on your election of George Bush... twice, so stop feeling offended cause its true.

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xXBuffJeffXx

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#19 xXBuffJeffXx
Member since 2006 • 5913 Posts
The only thing that could possibly be worse is if Obama was holding a substantial lead.
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TM_Darkside

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#20 TM_Darkside
Member since 2007 • 3993 Posts
I've lost all faith in the general public's ideas as things are, so I'm not too worried about it. Since when are polls accurate, anyway? Hopefully McCain makes a huge blunder somewhere, not that the public would care unless it was discovered that he was pro-choice or something. God forbid people have the ability to make decisions for themselves.
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quiglythegreat

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#21 quiglythegreat
Member since 2006 • 16886 Posts

[QUOTE="Hungry_bunny"]Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.famicommander
A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.

...I've never heard of polls at this point being very indicative of anything...

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GabuEx

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#22 GabuEx
Member since 2006 • 36552 Posts

[QUOTE="Hungry_bunny"]Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.famicommander
A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.

Of course, the caveat there is that that's likely voters, which always tends to be a bit dodgy as there is no real scientific way of determining what a likely voter is.

He's still up 4 among registered voters in the same poll, though.

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famicommander

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#23 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts

[QUOTE="famicommander"][QUOTE="Hungry_bunny"]Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.quiglythegreat

A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.

...I've never heard of polls at this point being very indicative of anything...

I never said that this guaranteed the election for McCain or anything. But at this point polls and prediction maps are the only thing we've got to go on, and it seems that McCain is winning in that respect.
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ferrari2001

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#24 ferrari2001
Member since 2008 • 17772 Posts
[QUOTE="quiglythegreat"]

[QUOTE="famicommander"][QUOTE="Hungry_bunny"]Is 54% vs 44% "huge"? I guess it is looking good for McCain but those polls always seem to say so little about how the end result will look like.famicommander

A 10% margin really is huge. It's the largest margin either candidate has had since Obama officially wrapped up the Democratic nomination.

...I've never heard of polls at this point being very indicative of anything...

I never said that this guaranteed the election for McCain or anything. But at this point polls and prediction maps are the only thing we've got to go on, and it seems that McCain is winning in that respect.

actually if you don't count leaning states than Obama is winning by 1 state. If you count leaning states Obama, is winning by a couple of states. So it will be a VERY close election if youth actually show up and vote.

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tokay411

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#25 tokay411
Member since 2008 • 56 Posts

the lead in the polls doesn't necessarily mean anything. In 2000 when it was Bush VS Gore, Gore won the popular vote (what us citizens voted for) but Bush won over the majority of the electoral college votes, which overrides the popular vote. That's how we got the first four years of Bush.

As for the second 4 years... that was just caused by ignorance. So this election could really go either way. It's all up in the air right now

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Trashface

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#26 Trashface
Member since 2006 • 3534 Posts
If Obama isn't at least 8 points or so ahead going into November, he doesn't have a shot. I'll be voting fo sho.
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Trashface

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#27 Trashface
Member since 2006 • 3534 Posts

the lead in the polls doesn't necessarily mean anything. In 2000 when it was Bush VS Gore, Gore won the popular vote (what us citizens voted for) but Bush won over the majority of the electoral college votes, which overrides the popular vote. That's how we got the first four years of Bush.

As for the second 4 years... that was just caused by ignorance. So this election could really go either way. It's all up in the air right now

tokay411

Or maybe the last 4 Bush years was caused by people who don't buy into liberal ideals or their pandering.

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194197844077667059316682358889

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#28 194197844077667059316682358889
Member since 2003 • 49173 Posts
If Obama isn't at least 8 points or so ahead going into November, he doesn't have a shot. I'll be voting fo sho.Trashface
Mmmm, inexplicable assertions are so gratifying, aren't they?
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Nickman71

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#29 Nickman71
Member since 2003 • 1002 Posts

It's almost like he got some sort of convention bounce!

MADNESS!

Please, stop embarassing yourself and read 538.
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pspdseagle

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#30 pspdseagle
Member since 2007 • 3307 Posts

Jeez Americans are crazy...........

They should learn from us Canadians. In here Obama would be winning 6 to 1

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Zeromus1337

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#31 Zeromus1337
Member since 2008 • 15955 Posts
Wow, he's on a roll.
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famicommander

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#32 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts

It's almost like he got some sort of convention bounce!

MADNESS!

Please, stop embarassing yourself and read 538.Nickman71
How about you stop embarassing yourself and start reading the original post of threads you reply to? Just look at the link I proveded. Compare pre-DNC to post DNC numbers and pre-DNC to post-RNC numbers. McCain got a much larger boost, which I also mentioned will likely wear off in the coming days.
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famicommander

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#33 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts

Jeez Americans are crazy...........

They should learn from us Canadians. In here Obama would be winning 6 to 1

pspdseagle
Yeah, because someone who disagrees with you is automatically crazy.
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sun-son

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#34 sun-son
Member since 2007 • 230 Posts
the thing I don't understand is how we look at the ocean, but we don't see whats under it. All these attacks between these two candidates say nothing about their plans on how to fix the issues they speak about.
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shahchip

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#35 shahchip
Member since 2007 • 1282 Posts

Is it true that some states' votes are "worth" more that other states? i think ive heard that somewhere

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DarkPrinceXC

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#36 DarkPrinceXC
Member since 2003 • 5921 Posts

they are both bad and they should feel bad. Polls mean nothing. Americans have an attention span of a gold fish and I am basing this on your election of George Bush... twice, so stop feeling offended cause its true.

SOTE

I didn't vote for him.... :P

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legend26

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#37 legend26
Member since 2007 • 16010 Posts

the lead in the polls doesn't necessarily mean anything. In 2000 when it was Bush VS Gore, Gore won the popular vote (what us citizens voted for) but Bush won over the majority of the electoral college votes, which overrides the popular vote. That's how we got the first four years of Bush.

As for the second 4 years... that was just caused by ignorance. So this election could really go either way. It's all up in the air right now

tokay411

why the hell do we still have the electoral collage....

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DeathHeart95

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#38 DeathHeart95
Member since 2008 • 2541 Posts
[QUOTE="Scarker"]

Out of context here, but what if Jon Stewart was the moderator for one of these debates?

That'd be epic.

ElZilcho90

It'd be a pathetic display has he'd take every opportunity to grovel at the feet of Obama and snipe at McCain.

It's on Comedy Central

com·e·dy

1.a play, movie, etc., of light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending; a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance, resulting in a successful or happy conclusion.

2.that branch of the drama which concerns itself with this form of composition.

3.the comic element of drama, of literature generally, or of life.

4.any literary composition dealing with a theme suitable for comedy, or employing the methods of comedy.

5.any comic or humorous incident or series of incidents.

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famicommander

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#39 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts

Is it true that some states' votes are "worth" more that other states? i think ive heard that somewhere

shahchip
The states are awarded votes based on their populations.
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H8sMikeMoore

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#40 H8sMikeMoore
Member since 2008 • 5427 Posts

Since when are polls accurate?Pittfan666

i guess it only matters when obama is ahead?

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famicommander

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#41 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts
[QUOTE="tokay411"]

the lead in the polls doesn't necessarily mean anything. In 2000 when it was Bush VS Gore, Gore won the popular vote (what us citizens voted for) but Bush won over the majority of the electoral college votes, which overrides the popular vote. That's how we got the first four years of Bush.

As for the second 4 years... that was just caused by ignorance. So this election could really go either way. It's all up in the air right now

legend26

why the hell do we still have the electoral collage....

Because it gives states with smaller populations an actual voice in the election?
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DeathHeart95

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#42 DeathHeart95
Member since 2008 • 2541 Posts
[QUOTE="legend26"][QUOTE="tokay411"]

the lead in the polls doesn't necessarily mean anything. In 2000 when it was Bush VS Gore, Gore won the popular vote (what us citizens voted for) but Bush won over the majority of the electoral college votes, which overrides the popular vote. That's how we got the first four years of Bush.

As for the second 4 years... that was just caused by ignorance. So this election could really go either way. It's all up in the air right now

famicommander

why the hell do we still have the electoral collage....

Because it gives states with smaller populations an actual voice in the election?

Or we could vote as a country rather than individual states.

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shahchip

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#43 shahchip
Member since 2007 • 1282 Posts
[QUOTE="shahchip"]

Is it true that some states' votes are "worth" more that other states? i think ive heard that somewhere

famicommander

The states are awarded votes based on their populations.

Oh i heard something about Gore getting more votes than Bush but Bush won cause his votes were worth more.. but i dont really remember i just started paying attention to US elections

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GabuEx

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#44 GabuEx
Member since 2006 • 36552 Posts

why the hell do we still have the electoral collage....

legend26

Well, I know some people who want to go back to the system where the voting population only elects members of the House. :P

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GabuEx

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#45 GabuEx
Member since 2006 • 36552 Posts
[QUOTE="famicommander"]The states are awarded votes based on their populations.shahchip

Oh i heard something about Gore getting more votes than Bush but Bush won cause his votes were worth more.. but i dont really remember i just started paying attention to US elections

Basically, it goes like this. Each state is awarded a number of presidential electors proportional to their representation in the House and Senate. They get one elector for each such representative - that makes it a baseline of two since every state has two senators, plus one for every house representative that they have. In every state except for Maine and Nebraska* electors are appointed based on who wins the popular vote in that state. Then, the electors for each respective party's presidential/vice-presidential ticket are added up, and whoever has the most wins the election and is the next president and vice president.

*Maine and Nebraska are pretty similar, but not quite: they appoint two electors for whoever wins the statewide vote, and one additional elector for whomever wins the popular vote in each congressional district.

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famicommander

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#46 famicommander
Member since 2008 • 8524 Posts
[QUOTE="famicommander"][QUOTE="shahchip"]

Is it true that some states' votes are "worth" more that other states? i think ive heard that somewhere

shahchip

The states are awarded votes based on their populations.

Oh i heard something about Gore getting more votes than Bush but Bush won cause his votes were worth more.. but i dont really remember i just started paying attention to US elections

We have two votes in the US: the popular vote (which Gore won) and the electoral vote (which Bush won). The popular vote is just what it sounds like; they count up the total number of people voting for each candidate. But it doesn't really count. They assign a certain number of electoral votes to a state based on its population. The candidate that gets the popular vote from that individual state wins the electoral votes from that state. The candidate with the most electoral votes becomes president.
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Toriko42

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#47 Toriko42
Member since 2006 • 27562 Posts
Since when are polls accurate?Pittfan666
Exactly, just look at the huge difference in them not to mention potential error margins
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shahchip

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#48 shahchip
Member since 2007 • 1282 Posts
[QUOTE="shahchip"][QUOTE="famicommander"]The states are awarded votes based on their populations.GabuEx

Oh i heard something about Gore getting more votes than Bush but Bush won cause his votes were worth more.. but i dont really remember i just started paying attention to US elections

Basically, it goes like this. Each state is awarded a number of presidential electors proportional to their representation in the House and Senate. They get one elector for each such representative - that makes it a baseline of two since every state has two senators, plus one for every house representative that they have. In every state except for Maine and Nebraska* electors are appointed based on who wins the popular vote in that state. Then, the electors for each respective party's presidential/vice-presidential ticket are added up, and whoever has the most wins the election and is the next president and vice president.

*Maine and Nebraska are pretty similar, but not quite: they appoint two electors for whoever wins the statewide vote, and one additional elector for whomever wins the popular vote in each congressional district.

Thanks for explaining, i get it now but still have a question. So in the presidential elections they don't really count individual votes but instead they count the states? like if one state has the most votes for Obama, it counts as 1/50 states for Obama right?

Juggling between Canada, Pakistan and US's governments isnt too easy since they're all different so i usually end up confused

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Elraptor

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#49 Elraptor
Member since 2004 • 30966 Posts
[QUOTE="Scarker"]

Out of context here, but what if Jon Stewart was the moderator for one of these debates?

That'd be epic.

ElZilcho90

It'd be a pathetic display has he'd take every opportunity to grovel at the feet of Obama and snipe at McCain.

Comedians can get away with almost anything.
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GabuEx

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#50 GabuEx
Member since 2006 • 36552 Posts

Thanks for explaining, i get it now but still have a question. So in the presidential elections they don't really count individual votes but instead they count the states? like if one state has the most votes for Obama, it counts as 1/50 states for Obama right?

shahchip

It's correct to say that they count the state votes, not the popular vote, but states are not weighted equally, so it's not really correct to say that something counts as 1/50 states for Obama. They're weighted based on the number of electors they're apportioned. California, the largest state, has 55 electors; Wyoming, the smallest state, has only 3. There are always 538 electors in total. So, if Obama wins the popular vote in California, that's not really 1/50 states for Obama; that's 55/538 electors for Obama.