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Previous comments... You are currently on page 8.
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http://tinyurl.com/zfjjol9
In either case, until the Primary nominee is selected, the General election is a moot point. I will wait until then to worry about it.
It is going to be much closer than anyone thought after the first month or so, but Cruz' organization is adept at marketing and he hasn't made key missteps like Trump has. The other thing "The Donald" has to face is that unlike Cruz, he already has 100% name recognition and people have already pretty much formed their opinions of him - either positive or negative. That's not necessarily a good thing, however, as Trump has a decidedly negative overall rating which is close to Hillary's overall negative rating. If it comes down to those Hillary v Trump in the Generals, you are going to have a lot of people who just don't vote at all - in general a boon to the Democrat.
he will or would be a mistake.
Please let me know if you find out more about the suit, as it likely has implications into the current President...
It is my impression, but I am not following closely is that all Cruz can do is keep Trump from getting 1257
Once a candidate starts getting positive media strokes, even when they make outrageous statements, I get suspicious. It appears that the GOP establishment is holding its gorge, reluctantly, holding out the hope Cruz can stop Trump.
The issue of "natural born" is not a dead issue regarding Cruz, and you can bet the DNC is going to leap on it like a demon if he's the GOP candidate. His wife's connection to Goldman Sachs is a rich target for Bernie Sanders, if he's the Democrat candidate, and even if Hillary is the one, super-Pacs will unload on that subject.
Ted Cruz has a delivery style of an evangelical Baptist minister delivering a hellfire and brimstone sermon. Maybe my disgust with pious hypocrites and my rejection of the Baptist church as a young teen clouds my judgement, but I think he would make many less conservative voters uncomfortable.
Cruz may look better than the Trump circus, or the "undead" Kasich campaign, but it's hard for me to picture him as the only viable candidate.
Electors are bound by the rules of their respective States. Some States still allow Electors to vote however they choose, but most don't. A few require that their Electors vote in proportion to the popular vote obtained in those states, but most require the Electors to vote entirely for the candidate who wins the popular vote. Whether or not this is Constitutional is perhaps a subject for another post. Remember, originally, the President was supposed to be elected by the States and the Electors were agents of the State. The Twelfth Amendment is responsible for making the President a popular vote decision, so you would be debating it as well.
We got into this mess cause we allowed government to break those laws.
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