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Only if President Biden accepts the results of the election. He has a near twenty-five year history of denying election results that he doesn't like...
I'm just hoping to see Trump win South Carolina since it will be a F U to Nikki Haley, whose home state is SC.
But until November, I will be fretting just the same. Nothing is a done deal till it happens. Then we have the General Election. I am really fretting about that.
So much can happen. I just cant even think about Biden cheating again and being installed again thru cheating and fake ballots etc. I cant picture the next 4 years with him being installed again as the resident of the White House.
I live in PA and have already requested my "no excuse" mail ballot. iI am a registered Democrat. My disabled Vet husband has also requested his as well. He is a registered "RINO Never Trump" voter who said he will be voting Libertarian again, whoever their candidate will be. I guess you will have to throw out both of our fraudulent ballots.
Trump doesn't even need Arizona and Nevada. The electoral map is so favorable to him
Pretty much.
Quote:
Originally Posted by flamadiddle
Fingers crossed because America is on the edge of collapse
You and others don't appreciate Joe Biden's obvious greatness; a truly inspirational figure. He must be among the ten greatest Presidents, though not the top five. The Top 5 are Lincoln, Washington, (Theodore) Roosevelt, Truman, Polk and a sixth and seventh, Reagan and Jackson. Biden would have to come next, for his eloquence and obvious intelligence and leadership qualities.
I agree he's unelectable but what are those center Republican policies he doesn't share?
Or is "center" code-speak for something else?
In 2020, Biden led Trump by 5.6 points on Feb. 16, and bested him in November by 4.5. In 2016, Hillary Clinton led Donald Trump by 3.4 points, according to the RealClearPolitics average, in a race she ultimately won nationally by 2.1 percent. On this day in 2012, Barack Obama led Republican Mitt Romney by 5.7 points and put him away in November by 3.9 percent. The most comforting comparison for Democrats might be 2004, when John Kerry was ahead of incumbent Republican President George W. Bush by 1.9 points in an average of the last 10 polls through Feb. 16, and Bush came back to win by 2.4 percent. But that’s still only about a 4-point swing overall.
The odds of this matchup being anything other than Biden–Trump, for better or worse, are pretty long at this point. These men are completely known quantities engaged in the first presidential rematch since 1956. Even someone who has been in a coma since late 2019 would have pretty firm opinions about them. But the Democratic optimists would have you believe that an electorally significant chunk of voters will soon change their minds.
Why might Trump’s lead be a chimera? According to one prominent theory, it’s because the inevitability of Trump’s nomination hasn’t broken through to voters who are unhappy with Joe Biden but who will ultimately come home. As the Editorial Board’s John Stoehr noted in a widely shared thread Tuesday on X, “Most people still don’t quite believe Trump is going to be the Republican Party’s nominee.” Once they do, he says, “a switch will turn on.”
The trouble with this theory is that it should already be working its magic, and there is no evidence that it is. We’re halfway through February, not mired in some slow-news-cycle August afternoon the year before the election.The more time passes with Trump leading in polling averages, the less likely it is that there is anything particularly mysterious at work here at all.
Unless and until that happens, arguing that Biden is a lock to win in spite of the evidence in front of you is to substitute disbelief for empirical reality. As Rosenberg put it incredulously, “The theory is that all this—the fact that Democrats just keep winning everywhere in red states and blue states, and ballot initiatives, and off-year elections, and special elections—isn’t going to translate over into 2024.” But that is exactly what the data is telling us! This denial is the same incredulity that led many to dismiss the possibility of Trump becoming the Republican nominee in 2016 despite his consistent polling leads throughout the cycle. https://news.yahoo.com/three-comfort...104500704.html
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