Jesse Walker | January 3, 2008
The best news for Ron Paul tonight might be his showing among independents. On the Democratic side, independent voters overwhelmingly preferred Barack Obama: According to the data presently posted at CNN's site, he got 41% of their support, well ahead of John Edwards' 28%. In the Republican contest, their favorite was Paul: CNN says he got 29% of the independent vote, compared to 23% for his nearest rival, John McCain.
Is that good tidings for New Hampshire? Maybe—or maybe it just means they'll turn out for Obama instead of voting in the Republican race. Stay tuned.
[Via Andrew Sullivan.]
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
independent voters overwhelmingly preferred Barack Obama:
According to the data presently posted at CNN's site, he got 41% of
their support, well ahead of John Edwards' 28%. In the Republican
contest, their favorite was Paul: CNN says he got 29% of the
independent vote, compared to 23% for his nearest rival, John
McCain.
That comes out to 121%
Obama got 41% of the independents voting Democrat, the rest get the independents voting Republican.
That comes out to 121%
Jay,
Those are two different buckets of independents. One group voted in
the Republican caucuses and the other voted in the Democratic
caucuses.
It would be more informative to me if all independents were in
the same bucket.
Why separate out "Democratic independents" from "Republican
independents"?
Fred McCain (what's the difference) surprised a lot of folks
tonight, but the biggest shocker:
Republican
reaction to Ron Paul's performance in Iowa turns deadly - Ann
Coulter goes on hunger strike, dies minutes later.
I wish the so-called independents would pay more attention to foreign policy. Say what you will about Joe Biden, but the man's got an actual grasp of the current Pakistani situation unlike the current bunch of morons in both parties (and the press).
NP,
Now that he's bowed out, the best way to have Biden have effect on
foreign policy would be a vote for Obama. The scuttlebutt is that
Biden would be Obama's SoS.
OK, I'll do the legwork. If the independents are all counted in
the same bucket:
Obama 23%
Edwards 13%
Paul 12%
McCain 9.9%
Ah yes, election season, when crappy news site web design
regularly crashes my browser.
I'll be interested to see the raw numbers on the youth vote. The
statistics on the Republican side suggests Huckabee's evangelical
force significantly outnumbered any young Paulites -- another bust
on the "I'll bring out the college kids" meme that has emerged
during every election I've lived through. But it seems possible
that Obama may have truly delivered on that front, which is
astonishing.
More astonishing: Fred Thompson beat Paul while, for all intents
and purposes, asleep.
Less astonishing: Paul _owns_ the Bush-hating Republican
vote.
Anon
Mo,
I'm not sure if that rumor is very reliable, 'cause he's repeatedly
denied that he would accept the job. We'll see what happens.
Most of the self-identifying Republicans voting in the Dem caucus voted for Obama.
I'ts my fault- I shouldn't have tipped Huck off to the Kentucky
voter diversion:
http://adamant.typepad.com/seitz/2008/01/in-huck-signo-v.html
From 3quarks daily,
A Stanford University computer scientist named John Koza has
formulated a compelling and pragmatic alternative to the Electoral
College. It's called National Popular Vote (NPV), and has been
hailed as "ingenious" by two New York Times editorials. In April,
Maryland became the first state to pass it into law. And several
other states, including Illinois and New Jersey, are likely to
follow suit.
How NPV works is this: Instead of a state awarding its electors to
the top vote-getter in that state's winner-take-all presidential
election, the state would give its electoral votes to the winner of
the national popular vote. This would be perfectly legal because
the U.S. Constitution grants states the right to determine how to
cast their electoral votes, so no congressional or federal approval
would be required. NPV could go into effect nationwide as soon as
enough states pass it (enough states to tally 270 electoral
votes-the magic number needed to elect a president). In 2008, NPV
bills are expected to be introduced in all 50 states.
"We'll have it by 2012," says Robert Richie, executive director of
the reform group Fair Vote.
http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3457/dropping_out_of_electoral_college/
I'm completely distraught: we lovers of liberty are really and
truly boned this time. The major political parties are being
described in the media as the parties of "change" and "religion".
Let me say this: Neither of these ought to excite
libertarians.
Change: Look out for encroaching government power, expanded
entitlements ("if you think health care's expensive now, wait until
it's free"), McCain-Feingold style "political reform",
british-style nannyism, and the living crap being taxed out of
anybody productive to pay for it all. "Liberaltarianism" is a
sucker's game.
Religion: In my experience libertarians don't much like being told
what to do. The breakup of the libertarian/social conservative
coalition is going to be a disaster for liberty; as crappy as the
Republicans have been about some aspects of liberty, the Democrats
are worse in almost every concievable way.
What are libertarians gaining out of this? Ron Paul, the McGovern
of our day, earnest, passionate, idealistic, and poised to dash the
hopes of generation of young liberty enthusiasts with regard to
politics.
How's the Alaskan seccessionist movement doing these days, I
wonder?
How NPV works is this: Instead of a state awarding its electors to the top vote-getter in that state's winner-take-all presidential election, the state would give its electoral votes to the winner of the national popular vote.
Why in the world would a state government agree to that? Suppose a
state goes dramatically Republican, while the national race goes
narrowly Democrat. (Or vice-versa.) Why in the world would the
state government over-ride the clear wishes of it's people?
Ron Paul, the McGovern of our day, earnest, passionate, idealistic, and poised to dash the hopes of generation of young liberty enthusiasts with regard to politics.
Geez, Louise! These "young liberty enthusiasts" better get some
grit. Ron Paul is doing spectacularly well. No presidential
candidate who can credibly be called "libertarian" has done so well
in decades.
"Why in the world would a state government agree to that?
Suppose a state goes dramatically Republican, while the national
race goes narrowly Democrat. (Or vice-versa.) Why in the world
would the state government over-ride the clear wishes of it's
people?"
Because people here suck, don't understand what a Republic is or
why it's actually a good thing and want us to be like France.
Forget what I wrote earlier.
If the independents were taken as one bucket:
Obama 28%
Edwards 15%
Paul 9.5%
McCain 7.5%
How NPV works is this: Instead of a state awarding its
electors to the top vote-getter in that state's winner-take-all
presidential election, the state would give its electoral votes to
the winner of the national popular vote
Let me add a few thoughts:
Your vote (and that of everone else) would now be able to be
nullified by fraud in any populous state. As it is, you're now
insulated from voter fraud in any state where it isn't close.
The framers, lovers of liberty all, weren't big on plebiscites or
direct democracy. 200-odd years of being the freest nation on
earth, we might not want to mess around here.
Why would any state want make its electors vote against the wishes
of its electorate? This only makes sense if you're a big state that
wants to use numbers to push around smaller states.
Also, I wonder about faithless electors. Get ready for a
constitutional crisis should the republicans win the popular vote
but get very close on the old electoral vote and some New York
electors decide to vote their concience.
Fair Vote, bah!
No presidential candidate who can credibly be called
"libertarian" has done so well in decades.
I'm as thrilled as you are to find out there there are still as
many libertarians as there apparently are out there, but Ron Paul's
going to do about as much good towards advancing the cause of
liberty as Perot did putting a crazy Texan in the white house.
(G.H.W. Bush may not have been a real Texan, but he was a lot more
Texan than the other guy) It's not my finest analogy, I'll
admit.
Where's our Goldwater?
Well, here's a
positive view from the LA Times.
As consolation prizes go, you've got to admit it ain't bad....
I'd love to see Ron Paul President. We haven't had an atomic war
for what? 60+ years. And the last one was so one sided.
I think he could pull it off too. Just pull all our forces out of
far away places and let the miscreants work on what ever interests
them.
Can't wait to see how Ron does in National Offense Country i.e.
the South.
Them boys hate losing wars. Just hate it.
Where's our Goldwater?
The closest you will come is Thompson. And he hates the jihadis as
much as Goldwater hated the communists.
I really do not believe Libs could stomach a Goldwater. Too
National Offense oriented.
Well at least we get to elect our commissars. Obama seems nice
enough.
If Ron can suck enough votes from the Republicans a Dem would have
a lock.
I applaud the legislators of Illinois giving our votes to the people of California. Very progressive.
ali-
How fucking dumb do you have to be to have not
seen this study "debunked" multiple times?
Just look at this "statistic"--
Bush..... IQ: 91
Kerry.... IQ: 128
"Google is your friend"-
...Unless you're an massively inbred cousin fucker whose every
ancestor came from a degenerate, third-world Muslim shithole with
an average IQ of 85. (or, did I repeat myself...)
HAHA!
Actually don't just check the independents and the age (which
actually the Huckster also won, with RP tied with Mitt for 2nd). I
think the age thing is overrated because I've worked with meetup
events in NW Indiana, and we are very diverse age-wise, especially
for a group organized on the internet!
What I wonder is how Ron Paul did so hot in the SE counties of
Iowa. Ron Paul WON Jefferson County! Only Romney and the Huckster
won counties besides this one by Paul. He seems to have a little
bit of a hold in SE Iowa - great link here - turn this link into a
new thread Jesse!
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=caucus
OK, I'll do the legwork. If the independents are all counted in the
same bucket:
Obama 23%
Edwards 13%
Paul 12%
McCain 9.9%
In Michigan you can count on a significant portion of the
independent vote that went to Obama and Edwards to go to Paul since
neither of them will be on the ballot. You can also count on a
significant portion of the democratic vote to go for Ron Paul here
in Michigan.
"Ron Paul came behind Fred Thompson, for Christ's sake."
But he got more than three times the votes that Giuliani got.
Ali, you are normally a bright guy, but you've been scammed.
Eyeball statistics show this is bogus. There is no way a group of
1+ million people has an average IQ of either 113 (Conn) or 85
(Miss). The standard deviation for IQ is 15. The specific numbers
for Kerry and Bush were long ago debunked, they had very similar
test results.
These guys are trying to play the old 'Dem's are smart Rep's are
dumb game' that has been going on for decades. Rule of thumb, when
you see it, assume it is bogus. Even if you want to believe, check
it thoroughly. It comes from the city dweller's assumption that
those in flyover country are not as smart.
I do not know if it is still the case, but for years even though
the assumption was that Dem's were smarter, on average they made
less money then Rep's. (For whatever reason, money correlates to
IQ). I have no idea where Libertarians fall, but based on the ads
in Reason I don't think it is a rich group.
Though I am usually loathe to give just a wikipedia link, the
NPV article responds to the criticisms above. Summary responses
for the three criticisms mentioned: Gaming the national
vote would be harder, not easier, than gaming a state's vote; the
will of the people is surely satisfied if each vote counts (as
opposed to being nullified at the state level by a winner take all
system);small states are already ignored in major elections -- and
campaigns in big states tend to visit all sizes of community (not
just big cities) because every vote counts.
I'm not saying these are completely convincing responses, but they
aren't bad.
Anon
Stuart -
Average IQ skews higher in some states than others because there's
no law that says you have to live in the state you were born
in.
Standard deviation logic doesn't apply when members of each sample
can jump from sample to sample based on lifestyle factors.
I'm sure many higher-IQ Mississippi residents move to California or
New York upon maturity. How many higher-IQ people move from
California to Mississippi?
Fluffy, I'm sure there is a skew towards some states, but are
you seriously suggesting that Mississippi's average IQ is 85?
Roughly 68% (it has been a while, so some statistician may correct
this) of data is within 1 standard deviation. That means that 16%
are below 85 and 16% are above 115.
An average IQ of 85 means that the average percentile of
intelligence in Mississippi is 16. I don't think so.
Okay fluffy, you got me to take a look.
It appears that the only study that exists requires
money to get, but the Economist printed a retraction
after they fell for the same hoax in 2004.
Snopes also discusses the hoax.
I did find a
reference to the study, by the same author (McDaniel), he gives
an estimate of a 94 IQ for Mississippi, 103 for Conn.
McDaniel's numbers are used on this site to
analyze state by state voting and IQ. It concludes that the average
IQ of Kerry voters was 100.88 and Bush voters was 99.81. A
meaningless difference, given the overall analysis.
More interestingly, he discusses which counties voted for Kerry in
the "low IQ" states, and decides not to go there, as it appears
that voting for Kerry could be associated with race and low IQ.
stuartl- I do not know what all the fuss is about. Someone
passed this along, thought it was a joke (haven't even looked at it
more than 2 minutes), and just pasted it here.
And for yusukemandlikenit-
Whatever!
Gaming the national vote would be harder, not easier, than
gaming a state's vote;
the will of the people is surely satisfied if each vote counts
(as opposed to being nullified at the state level by a winner take
all system)
Each vote already counts at the state level. In fact, your vote
counts more at the state level because it is diluted in a smaller
pool.
small states are already ignored in major elections -- and
campaigns in big states tend to visit all sizes of community (not
just big cities) because every vote counts.
Going to an NPV vote would concentrate electoral activity even more
in urban areas and big states.
This all misses the point, of course. This country did so well for
so long as a haven of liberty because its "democracy" was carefully
constrained. The growth of the State and the erosion of liberty is
pretty directly tied to expansions of democracy beyond the original
republican constraints. This is just more of the same.
And of course, this is all partisan-motivated by people who can't
get over the 2000 election. If a Republican wins the popular vote
but a Democrat wins the EC this fall (not an entirely unlikely
scenario if Hillary is the Dem nominee), everyone now talking about
an NPV for President will mysteriously shut up.
Ali, I missed the direction of your joke, it seemed more of a
"hey look, Reps are stupid" than a "look at the stupid things
people will believe."
Anyway, since my bias is that IQ would be pretty much the same, I
had some fun checking it out.
I would like to give my own idea for reforming the government. The House of Representatives keeps being elected in pretty much the same way it is now. In the Senate elections, you can buy as many votes as you want at a fixed price set every 10 years by Congress. The prez is elected by a fusion of the two systems. Also, besides the Senate fee, Congress needs a 2/3 majority of BOTH houses to pass any taxes. That way its more likely that those who pay the costs of govt will have the final say in what it does or does not do. Any objections?
stuartl- Sure, I did not mean any offense to anyone. Let it be clear that I am no collectivist.
economist,
Why not have the landed rich appoint lords to the senate
instead?
Neu Mejican
First of all, you're mixing up the British House of Lords and the
Roman Senate. Second, and more importantly, my plan is not about
granting special privileges based on birth or landed wealth. It is
about giving those who bear most of the cost of government
essentially having the power to keep it from spending their money
badly. They could not, however, buy political pull, as the House of
Representatives would be elected in the normal way, and all acts of
this Congress would require the consent of BOTH houses. It would be
a welcome change from our current system, where less than half of
the population bears 90 percent of the federal tax burden while the
rest of the population gets to decide how to spend it. I'm just
sayin'...
the will of the people is surely satisfied if each vote counts (as opposed to being nullified at the state level by a winner take all system)
Just not the will of the voters in your state...if your state votes
for one candidate, but the national vote goes to the other
candidate.
I can see apportioning electors according to the percentage for
each candidate within the state (i.e., 60/40 percentage within
state gives 60/40 split of electors). But I don't see how it is
good for the voters of a state if (hypothetically) 70 percent of
them vote for candidate A, but the electoral votes of their state
go to candidate B, because of the national vote.
As Patrick Henry said (regarding why not to participate in the
Constitutional Convention), "I smelt a rat."
Many criticisms have been leveled at this 18th Century system. First, why have electoral votes at all? Why not just elect the president by popular vote? The reason this system has never changed is simple: politics. States with many buffalo and few people, like Wyoming, benefit from it and are not keen on changing it. Since every state gets at least three electors, low-population states have proportionally far more political power than they would have in a direct election system. The number of voters per elector is about four times smaller in the three-elector states than in the most-populous states, as shown in this table. The fact that nearly all the low-population states are heavily Republican adds to the difficulties of changing the system. Direct election of the president would eliminate the current bias in favor of the Republicans.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245