JohnStOnge wrote:Baldy wrote:
I think we all can pretty much agree that was the smartest part of your post.
It does not make much difference. The reason Republicans didn't run in those districts is because they are overwhelmingly Democrat districts. If Republicans would have run in them they would have been blown out by overwhelming margins. Having Republicans run in those districts would have made very little difference in the overall popular vote percent margin.
Also, when you're looking at the margin in historical context, it's reasonable to assume that the same sort of thing has happened in the past. It was probably more of a factor in some years than in others. But it was also probably always a factor.
Not that the popular vote matters in multi-representative multi-district races, it makes a tremendous difference regarding this myth you and other Leftist call the "popular vote".
I don't really care, but I'll play this game just once because I get a kick out of proving you wrong.
I'll pick a handful of races at random:
Arizona's 7th Congressional District. The Donk was unopposed in 2018, but in 2016, the Conk lost by 50 points. He still got 40K votes.
Florida's 21st Congressional District. Unopposed in 2018. The Conk lost by 27 points in 2016, but still got 118K votes.
Massachusetts' 4th Congressional District. Unopposed in 2018. The Conk lost by 40 points (to a Kennedy) in 2016, but he still got over 113K votes.
Georgia's 5th Congressional District. Unopposed in 2018. The Conk lost by 70 points (to John Lewis) in 2016, the poor Conk got 47K votes.
Pennsylvania's 18th Congressional District. Unopposed in 2018, but in 2016, the Conk ran unopposed and captured over 293K votes.
In just those 5 random districts, there were over 600K votes for the R's that didn't count in 2018. Run those numbers for the 30 other uncontested races as an average, and you will add another 3.6 MILLION votes for a grand total of about 4.2 MILLION additional votes for the Republicans that weren't there in 2018. Add that 4.2 million to the 46.2 million total votes and the Republicans 'would' have gotten 50.4 million votes. Only a fraction less than what the Donks got in 2018.
To make you happy, lets drop the outliers and factor in the strange way California does elections and cut that 4.2 million in half, to 2.1 million votes. That is still plenty enough votes to destroy your stupid little hypothesis and blow it out of the water.