logo

Independent Voters Reject Both Obama and Romney's Plans for the Economy

image
Created: 13 June, 2012
Updated: 21 November, 2022
1 min read

Look what ABC News is reporting:

"Swing-voting independents see Barack Obama’s plans for the economy negatively rather than positively by 54-38 percent in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll, marking the president’s challenges as he seeks re-election in still-troubled economic times.It’s no party for Mitt Romney either. Independents also rate his economic plans more unfavorably than favorably, by 47-35 percent. But more are undecided, giving Romney some room to maneuver; unlike Obama, Romney avoids majority criticism in this group."

Romney might fare marginally better, but still, a 12 point gap on favorability for his economic plans isn't exactly a vote of confidence. My advice to independents who don't believe either candidate will improve the economy with their policy agenda is not to give in to the "lesser-of-two-evils" mentality by November.  You're only really throwing away your vote if you vote for someone you don't strongly prefer merely because they are only marginally less harmful than the alternative. Instead, pick a third party or independent candidate that you really believe will make the country stronger.

Just my personal opinion.

Latest articles

American flag with I Voted stickers on it.
Yes, Elections Have Consequences -- Primary Elections to Be Specific
Can you imagine a Republican winning in an electoral district in which Democrats make up 41% of the registered electorate? Seems farfetched in much of the country. As farfetched as a Democrat winning in a R+10 district....
16 November, 2024
-
5 min read
Donald Trump
Why Did Donald Trump Win?
Former and future President Donald Trump's decisive 2024 win with 312 electors (to Harris’ 226) and 50.1% of the votes nationwide (to Harris' 48.3%) was a resounding victory. ...
16 November, 2024
-
7 min read
Portland
More Choice, Better Representation: Portland Voters Use Ranked Choice Voting for First Time
This year, Portland, Oregon used ranked choice voting (RCV) for the first time after voters approved the reform in 2022. Portlanders used RCV to elect all city officials – including a new mayor, and twelve new councilmembers from four 3-member districts using the proportional form of RCV. The reform is already proving its ability to provide better representation and promote effective governance....
15 November, 2024
-
5 min read