bedub1 wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:john9blue wrote:Keep in mind that candidates are more likely to come from a state that already supports their party (because they were probably a senator, governor, etc. before running), so we should only look at the cases where states that normally voted against that party decided to vote for that party because of the candidate.
This is part of what I was saying earlier.
A person doesn't become a candidate for president unless they already have power, and that power almost always comes from within their own state before they move out to the national level. The exceptions are pretty few, and cases where someone has either tried to side-step that process (Gore, coming back to Tennessee after being "just national" for so long) or where the power base was pretty spread out to begin. Nixon is perhaps an example of that. To contrast, Reagan definitely garnered a lot of fairly liberal votes from CA, as much as anything because "the devil we knew was better than the one we did not". (and I was not being facetious when I said Reagan would be called a liberal if he ran today -- though, in truth, he was too much the politician not to have "swayed" with the tide).
What about Hillary Clinton and how she changed her Home State cause she wanted to go run in New York wasn't it? Do you think that is fair? Do you think her own home state would have elected her? Do you think it's okay for people to go state shopping until they find one that will elect them?
That's not even factually correct, the Clintons had a place in New York before Bill was even out of office.
