Quote from Pekelo:
Here is an interesting scenario:
Let's say there is a charismatic, well liked blah-blah-blah 3rd party candidate, who against all odds makes it through the race with popular support and with the people's money, instead of corporations'. He is only accountable to the people. He promises everything what the other 2 parties wouldn't do.
Let's say we are 1 week away from election night and the polls are saying that he will win 40% with the other 2 trailing 30-30% of all votes. Now obviously neither established parties wants to lose to an unpredictable, uncontrollable newcomer. Let's say you are the Rep or Dem adviser and facing a pretty much guaranteed loss.
What do you do???* (beside assassination )
Well, if I were Karl Rove, I would sit down with the Dems and make a deal. 3 days before election we would announce that we reached an agreement and we vote for the agreed candidate. So we would have a public coinflip, and whoever wins that, both parties' voters are encouraged to vote for that person. The VP can even come from the other party.
Even if 15% or so of the voting block still votes to their own candidate, that would still give a 45% win over the 3rd party's 40%....
What is the point here? That the 2 incumbent parties can screw over a 3rd party candidate at the last moment, if the situation calls for it. Later they can negotiate how they are going to share the power, but letting in the unwanted guy would be averted...
* Messing with the voting machines also works, as we remember.![]()
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