28% Of Fla. Republicans Have Early Voted For Clinton

exit polls



do you know what those are fool


Please elaborate. Are you saying Kerry won the exit polling and Bush nefariously cheated him? Is that what you are on record claiming? According to many democrats you are a threat to our democracy. Just sayin
 
it's sampling of early voters..are there 3 million early voters here already??

extremely small sample size:
The poll surveyed 718 people, 311 who said they voted early, through web and phone interviews.
 
hahahahahahahahahhgwhwhwhwhwhahahahhahhshshshshshahahahahahahahahaha



actual voters who were chosen as representative of the demographics
 
You are missing my larger point. For a second put aside your desire to want this to be true and look at it logically.

Has anything we have seen in Florida state polling indicated that this was a remote possibility? Again, I am not saying that this is bogus or correct, just skeptical.

If this data is in fact correct, then we have to believe that there was this hidden Republican vote supporting Hillary not captured in the polling? If that is true, then we should eliminate all polling because it would be worthless. Do you really believe that all the polling companies out there got this that wrong? That is a HUGE miss wouldn't you agree?

Personally, I am against early voting for a whole host of reasons, but if we are going to do it, this kind of thing should not be allowed as I see it as a way to depress the vote.
If you've followed my posts, you know that I'm not a fan of polling. When someone offers a poll, the first thing I do is to review sampling. No online poll is credible.

I give a good amount of credence to Qunnipiac polling. They typically poll swing states, and their sampling is extensive. The lack of polling to suggest that there were 'hidden' Clinton Republicans is a good question. Given that most polls sample less than 2000 people, it's possible that these people slipped through the cracks.

Or...they thought they'd vote Trump, and had a last minute change of heart?


In '12, Romney led Obama by 1 point on election day....so I'm as skeptical as you re. polling.


I just don't view this as a typical poll. It's a phone interview asking people about who they voted for, as opposed to who they think they'll vote for.

In this ridiculous election cycle, it's easy to believe that people could make last minute decisions one way or another.

Contrast that with only 6% of Democrats in Fla who voted for Trump. I think Reps. blew a good chance at taking the White House by accepting this idiot.
 
and what will happen? :)

It's a long story. For the 1st year or 2, we'll all have to watch with a certain level of embarrassment as Trump learns how Washington works, and figures out that you can't repeal Obamacare or build a wall by snapping your fingers at a few underlings. As we know from Trump's personality, this will be extraordinarily frustrating from him, and instead of trying to build coalitions and consensus, we'll likely have late-night twitter wars with members of Congress and other associated tantrums.

He'll also try to back up his tough talk on terrorism & ISIS with poorly thought-out military action, alienating our allies and diminishing America's reputation in the process. He'll lash out at the domestic Muslim community and create an "us vs. them" mentality, depriving us of valuable intel that could prevent attacks. Emboldened by having a leader who sees things "their way," bigots everywhere will increase vandalism and vigilante attacks against innocent Muslims and other minorities.

Women will have it rough. Trump has talked about getting Roe v. Wade struck down "immediately," and that's actually the one thing he'll probably be able to do (though not right away).

If people think the debt has increased badly under Obama, they ain't seen nothin' yet. Trump's huge tax cuts along with increased expenditures on things like the military do not add up, even according to conservative analysts. Far from reducing the debt, as promised, we'll see huge increases to what we have now. If by any chance he can repeal Obamacare, he has promised to just replace it with "universal healthcare" that the "government will pay for."

In the end, he'll abandon most of his promises, because he doesn't really care about them anyway, and work on his post-Presidency brand to try to maximize profits for himself. Democrats will regain control of Congress, and Trump will get an historically low # of electoral votes for a GOP candidate in 2020, changing the electoral map and making states like Texas battleground states. The GOP will have to reinvent itself and start the long process of trying to win back women & minorities, which could take decades.
 
It's a long story. For the 1st year or 2, we'll all have to watch with a certain level of embarrassment as Trump learns how Washington works, and figures out that you can't repeal Obamacare or build a wall by snapping your fingers at a few underlings. As we know from Trump's personality, this will be extraordinarily frustrating from him, and instead of trying to build coalitions and consensus, we'll likely have late-night twitter wars with members of Congress and other associated tantrums.

He'll also try to back up his tough talk on terrorism & ISIS with poorly thought-out military action, alienating our allies and diminishing America's reputation in the process. He'll lash out at the domestic Muslim community and create an "us vs. them" mentality, depriving us of valuable intel that could prevent attacks. Emboldened by having a leader who sees things "their way," bigots everywhere will increase vandalism and vigilante attacks against innocent Muslims and other minorities.

Women will have it rough. Trump has talked about getting Roe v. Wade struck down "immediately," and that's actually the one thing he'll probably be able to do (though not right away).

If people think the debt has increased badly under Obama, they ain't seen nothin' yet. Trump's huge tax cuts along with increased expenditures on things like the military do not add up, even according to conservative analysts. Far from reducing the debt, as promised, we'll see huge increases to what we have now. If by any chance he can repeal Obamacare, he has promised to just replace it with "universal healthcare" that the "government will pay for."

In the end, he'll abandon most of his promises, because he doesn't really care about them anyway, and work on his post-Presidency brand to try to maximize profits for himself. Democrats will regain control of Congress, and Trump will get an historically low # of electoral votes for a GOP candidate in 2020, changing the electoral map and making states like Texas battleground states. The GOP will have to reinvent itself and start the long process of trying to win back women & minorities, which could take decades.

if he won he would reset


he has no set ideas


he would merely ''hire'' people to do the real work and begin making the white house bigly fabulous and holding pussy parties
 
yeah black voters don't feel like their votes will be counted unless they stand in lines for hours to vote
 
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