Here at work, we didn't really discuss who we were voting for prior to the election.
Turns out the office voted Johnson heh.
The debate on voting for 'lesser of two evils' is... lengthy. Some analogies:
If I sit down at a restaurant and they tell me my only choices are dog poop and cat poop... I'm walking out the door.
If I'm tied up and have the choice between someone hitting me with a wooden bat, someone hitting me with a metal bat, or someone who might let me go free, I'll pick the third person.
There was a time when red vs blue could easily be argued that one side has a few draw backs but those were worth dealing with cause their views mostly aligned with your own.
This election and the last 4-8 years, where has that distinction gone ? Where's the difference ? Purple party for the win!
Now, turning to vote counts.
First ... lets just with comparing vote count from 2008 to 2012.
2008: 59,948,240 for McCain
2012: 58,363,044 for Romney
So, in 4 years later, fewer people voted for Romney than they did McCain.
In 2008, third party votes were around 1,843k votes, coming up to around 1.41%
In 2012, third party votes were around 1,828k votes, coming up to around 1.51%
Attempting to blame third party stuff for siphoning votes off is silly by these numbers
This year, looking at some close states.
Florida:
4,202,606 Obama
4,138,990 Romney
------------------------
63,616 Difference
Independent vote count (not including write ins apparently) would be around 70-75k. Of which, Johnson pulled 44k. If you erroneously believe that all third party votes would have been red (which they wouldn't have been... would you have voted for roseanne barr ?) ... then sure, third party made a difference.
Virginia:
1,905,528 Obama
1,789,618 Romney
------------------------
115,910 difference
Independent vote (not including write ins): 52k or so. Doesn't make a difference.
Wisconsin:
1,613,950 Obama
1,408,746 Romney
------------------------
205,204 Difference
Third party vote (not including write ins) is under 40k. Doesn't make a difference.
Ohio:
2,697,260 Obama
2,593,779 Romney
--------------------------
103,481 Difference
Independent vote: around 86k. Wouldn't have made a difference.
Pennsylvania
2,907,448 Obama
2,619,583 Romney
-------------------------
287,865 Difference
Third party vote: 69k would not have made a difference.
Colorado
1,238,490 Obama
1,125,391 Romney
-------------------------
113,099 Difference
Third party vote: 55k ish ? Nope, no difference there.
So.... outside of some insane Republican Party Ron Paul write in fest (which may or may not have been done, i dunno?) ... attempting to blame third party stuff is
VERY moot.
"Political Strategy" constructs abound as to why things turned out like they did. From a somewhat outsider, I'll point these out...
* Obama got 69M votes in 2008, and only 61M in 2012. Nearly a 12% drop and the red party could do what
?
* Romney lost the primary to McCain last time around. You expected him to do better among your own party base this time ?
* Where are the policy differences ? I know Republicans that were disgusted enough to not bother
* Ron Paul was (and still is) packing stadiums left and right, has a very fervent fan base, etc .... yet the way the party treated him was downright ugly. No bones were thrown, nothing. Way to piss off stadiums filled with people.
* I dunno if the general population at large cares, but continuing with the treatment of Paul - the rules change on the RNC floor was poorly handled. That'd leave a sour taste in anyone's mouth, no matter what your position on Paul was.
* Quit saying stupid **** in front of a mic or in a memo (see wallace's post).
Talking with some friends that were very pro-Obama, they were very much of the opinion "anyone but Romney".
Moving on to the SCOTUS.
Would Romney have picked 'our favorites' -> probably not. The man's history doesn't indicate that.
Would Romeny have picked 'more centrist' or at least 'less left' -> Prolly.
But when you don't see a difference between a man's policy / platform, why would you assume he'd pick SCOTUS people differently ?
Very very very stupid mistakes by politicians saying very stupid things... (re: rape).... yeah... sigh. I have no idea wtf is wrong with these guys. Rape is very very bad, mmmkay. Even religious people view it as such.
Bringing this into pro-life/choice ... I still do
NOT understand what the big deal is. RvW settled it Constitutionally. Unless you're gonna get an Amendment through, move on with your life.
Politicians need to only say something like: It's a very complex issue that is very personal and emotion invoking. Wiser men than I, the SCOTUS, decided RvW already. For those that really want to know, my personal belief is that abortions are (right/wrong).
I think the whole 'pick a trimester when abortions become wrong' is just a smoke screen as well as attempting to find political middle ground on a subject via a personal/emotional stance rather than any type of legal mumbo jumbo.
For what it's worth, I abide by SCOTUS decisions from a legal stand point (this mandate decision is... well... cough... hard to swallow). On moral ground, I am pro-life with the understanding that there are some truly heinous situations that I can't begin to contemplate due to how awful they are. Such as: life / death situation for both mom and fetus. I hope to never be put in such a situation to have to make that kind of choice.