NCCommish
Footballguy
Well they are only just starting to include him. Only been in the last couple of weeks or so I think. And they only seem to be doing it to see how many votes it costs Mitt. It seems to cost him several percentage points. So I get why the Republican party doesn't want him on stage. It doesn't really hurt Obama's numbers but Johnson would force him to look like a moderate Republican so I understand why the Democratic party doesn't want him on stage. What I don't understand is what possible reason voters have for not wanting him on stage.I guess I'm not sure what you mean by "workable." If it means "there's at least some tiny insignificant chance of this happening", then I'd say both Goode and Johnson victories are workable. If it means "realistic", then I's say both the Johnson and Goode scenarios are unworkable.Yes, pegging the debates to polls where they don't even ask about Johnson is frustrating, but there have been a handful of polls that have included him and I don't think he's ever topped 5%. So it seems rather unlikely he'd reach the 15% threshold even if he were included in every poll.Actually there is. He is on enough state ballots that if he were to win he could get 270. And of course his isn't polling well, pollsters don't even ask about him. Hard to get to 15% when the handicappers won't list your horse.There's no "workable scenario" where Johnson wins either. That's the point. Johnson is saying, "I'm a real candidate, Goode is a fringe candidate, so I should be in the debates and he shouldn't." But Johnson's candidacy is much more similar to Goode's than it is to Romney's.'NCCommish said:Goode is going to win one small portion of Virginia. He is not going to win the state. And of course since the House is either Republican or Democrat he has no shot winning anything tossed there. Do you actually have a workable scenario or is this it?
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Seems better than the metric of having to have an R or D attached to your candidacy.
Duh.