"That'll do it" -- if he can beat the Republican, of course.

On 4/26/07, Anthony West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 That's what makes it so much fun. To witness a political race between
five viable candidates, all within a few points of each other, is virtually
without precedent in America. It's like participating in an election in a
vibrant multiparty nation like, oh, say Belgium, for example. While this is
all taking place in a "one-party town", in fact Democrat Philadelphia throbs
with ethnic, class and purely factional divisions that have resulted in a
very complex and entertaining election.

The mathematics of it are so bizarre that they alter the whole calculus of
politics. In a two-way race, you must strive to appeal to 51% of the
populace; in a (rare) three-way race, you can try to squeak by with 34%. But
in a close five-way race, in theory all it takes is 21% of the vote! So a
candidate doesn't have to dress up in majoritarian clothing. In practice, if
he can articulate a message and inspire a team that can turn out a hard-core
quarter of the voters ... that'll do it.

-- Tony West


*From:* Amara Rockar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*Subject:* Re: [UC] Mayor's Race


http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20070424-0817-primary-phillymayor.html

This Associated Press story says:
"The Democrat who comes in first in the May 15 primary wins the nomination
outright; no runoff is required."




--
Ross Bender
http://rossbender.org

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