stanky wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 5:50 am
Perhaps you recall the dem primary in West Virginia where Bernie won every district by a lot. The state was given to Hillary. That sound like a democracy?
I didn't recall that. So I looked it up.
According to Wikipedia, Bernie Sanders won 51% of the popular vote. Hillary got 36% Other candidates split up the rest. There were 29 delegates at stake. Sanders was awarded 18 (62%), and Clinton 11 (38%).
I don't know of any historical event that matches your recollection.
As for your larger point, it is impossible to take 200 million potential presidents and somehow, from that, pick one, and have people agree that the one chosen is the very best that could have possibly been chosen. That's why it almost always feels like we are voting against candidates by the time the general election rolls around. Our favorite is probably not one of the two choices.'
As it turns out, I don't think that's so bad. In my lifetime, there has been one candidate where huge numbers of people enthusiastically support as the very best candidate. That one is Donald Trump. Having demonstrable support like that may not be a good thing for the country.. Most of the time, voters get behind a candidate and may even get enthusiastic, but it's usually just a case that we are happy that a guy from our party got back into the White House after 4 or 8 or 12 years of those other awful people.
(Ronald Reagan might have also had a number of very enthusiastic people, but it was a small number at the time of his election. It grew during his presidency, and grew much more during his legacy. At the time of his election, he was that candidate who was Not Jimmy Carter. He had a core following, but mostly he was the Republican who happened to win the nomination.
Barak Obama sort of had an enthusiastic following. Certainly he generated excitement for a candidate. However, I think it was a combination of personal charisma, enthusiasm about electing a black candidate for the first time, and, more than anything else, getting rid of Republicans after eoght years of GWB.)
Voters have almost nothing to do with elections. Money does.
Money does have a great deal to do with elections. It's the economy, stupid.
There are issues with the way we pick elected representatives, but there are issues everywhere in the world where there are elections. I'm just glad we have elections to complain about. If things were as bad as you say they are, power wouldn't shift back and forth the way it does in America.