JEROME DA GNOME
Banned
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2007
- Messages
- 8,837
When I heard Romney had dropped out, I was stunned, but I came up with a theory to explain it. It was one of those theories that flashed into your head for about 12 seconds until you realize how ridiculous it is.
Now I'm seeing the results of today's contests, and it doesn't look so ridiculous. It has morphed all the way to far fetched.
Here's the theory:
On Super Tuesday, McCain racked up a huge, presumably undefeatable, delegate margin. However, he didn't win a majority in any state. It was obvious that there were two conservatives and McCain, and the two conservatives were going to keep splitting votes. Between Huckabee and Romney, Huckabee was going to win where there were huge numbers of Baptists who weren't going to vote for a Mormon as long at least as long as there was a Baptist in the race. Romney would win in elsewhere. However, in the three way race, McCain would win a lot of states, including almost all the big ones, because the conservative votes were split.
If Romney could have talked Huckabee out of the race, it was clear Romney would win the nomination, but Huckabee wasn't going to get out. Instead, Romney quits. Why? The crackpot theory that occurred to me was that by quitting, Romney could throw an awful lot of states to Huckabee, because the Limbaugh wing wasn't going to vote for McCain as long as there was an alternative. Maybe there would be enough states that went for the sole remaining conservative that McCain could actually be denied a majority.
Then, in a brokered convention, Romney gets picked.
OK, it's a crackpot idea. I put it out of my mind until today. Then today, after everyone said, "With Romney out, McCain is the nominee," as of this moment McCain has lost two out of three contests, and is "leading" in Washington with 26% of the vote.
You have to ask whether McCain can win a two way contest with Huckabee, and if it's obvious that he can't, would it make sense for him to be the nominee? Of course, maybe what happened is that the McCain voters just got complacent today, while the Huckabee, Romney, and Paul folks still felt like they had something to prove. Perhaps John will rally the troops a little more seriously on Tuesday when he sees that the nomination isn't really in the bag just yet.
It's kind of weird. I've never voted for a Republican for President, but I was thinking about it with McCain. I like him, and I don't like Clinton or Obama very much. If I were sure the Dems would keep at least one house of Congress, McCain would give us divided government, which I think is a great thing.
Well, there's plenty of room for weirdness between now and August. I guess we'll see where this goes.
ETA: And there has to be a better way to pick a President.
Interesting thoughts. Something that moves down the path you have presented is the fact that Romney has not quit, he has only "suspended" his campaign.
