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Appealing to the base in the general election is usually a zero sum game. Joel Send a noteboard - 28/10/2012 07:08:32 PM
It seems that quite a few think that abortion/rape/etc are the hot things to talk about right now. Like they are trying to keep the base riled and ready to vote, but then they are accidentally stupiding it up. I mean, seriously, if you're going to talk about something, at least brush up on, you know, 5th grade science.

Unless, maybe they are just really not so bright. Like, that they let the democrats bait them into answering shit they should be avoiding like the plague.

It motivates an opposing partisan for each of ones own. The Dems huge advantage in registration, generic ballots and overall make Republicans lucky if it fares even that well. Remember, low general turnout is a big part of their game plan, because they know that, all else being equal, Republicans are more likely to vote come or Hell or high water, out of patriotic duty, than decide both candidates suck and it is too cold/wet to bother. Look at Moderate Mitt running from the "severely conservative" candidate he called himself during the GOP primaries.

General elections are about the middle, especially for the GOP; appeals to the base usually lose more than they gain. Both candidates being so uninspiring this is likely to be a low turnout election somewhat mitigates that, but the only reason it is even close is the occasional/first time voters who turned in droves to elect Obama are staying home. Changing that dynamic would be a disaster for Republicans, and any candidate smart enough to hold office knows politics well enough to realize that.

Ultimately, it comes down to the same old thing though: Whether they are insincerely pandering to their base, completely uninformed about issues on which they volunteer to speak anyway, or naïve enough to walk face first into a trap, is any of those a quality we seek in federal lawmakers? Personally, I think they mean what they say and say what they mean, because they have no reason to volunteer controversial policy positions they do not hold (and every reason not to do so.) At least Akin and Co. are honest about it, and I can respect that a lot more than Romneys duplicity even if I disagree with their positions and know the "facts" they believe are false.
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This message last edited by Joel on 28/10/2012 at 07:10:24 PM
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Congressman Joe Walsh (R-IL) Says Abortion Never Necessary to Save a Womans Life - 27/10/2012 04:00:36 PM 875 Views
How many abortions have you caused women to have, that you are so blind to the crap here? - 28/10/2012 02:50:06 AM 411 Views
Since I am neither a woman nor doctor, none. - 28/10/2012 01:56:51 PM 501 Views
Re: Since I am neither a woman nor doctor, none. - 01/11/2012 04:06:03 AM 490 Views
how many kids have you adopted, in order to preserve the life you claim to save? - 29/10/2012 05:26:38 PM 410 Views
Which is bullshit - 01/11/2012 03:14:35 AM 523 Views
I guess... I'm confused about something. WHY do they all keep talking about this? - 28/10/2012 04:36:45 PM 366 Views
It is like the monkeys and typewriters thing but with politicians and microphones - 28/10/2012 04:47:26 PM 358 Views
Heh. - 28/10/2012 06:38:13 PM 435 Views
The only plausible explanation is "because they believe it." - 28/10/2012 05:42:18 PM 405 Views
Eh, I don't know. I feel like someone is telling them there is political capital to be made. - 28/10/2012 06:35:34 PM 482 Views
Appealing to the base in the general election is usually a zero sum game. - 28/10/2012 07:08:32 PM 496 Views
Because they see the world in black and white - 29/10/2012 12:50:17 AM 483 Views

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