ANSWERS: 3
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I support a joint ticket, and I was probably one of the very first to believe in a 'unity ticket', even before it was even just suggested/mentioned by the Media or blogs or pundits. Senator Obama has been a 'wine' track candidate with overwhelming African American support, a potent electoral 'cocktail' -- But he has not done well with women, Latinos and working class whites. Senator Clinton has done well with all three. It doesn't really matter if they like each other or not, the Democratic Party needs both of them: Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama (preferable) or Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. A unity ticket with these two great candidates, each with solid support within their own unique camps forming coalitions for common goals, encouraging a much more solid voting bloc in November.
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Nope. the democratic party will always be unified in the face of a republican like McCain. Look at the data from past races, I'll promise you on 80%+ of them, it was always the independents who decided everything. Parties unify in the end because they want their guy to win. Independents decide the race, not staunch party members.
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Not in the least.
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