Both parties have issues with their primaries requiring their candidates to take weird positions before changing them in the general elections. One of the reasons why incumbents rarely lose in their re-election bids (only two Presidents have lost their re-election elections since FDR) is that they don't need to run through the primaries. 2016 will see both parties have to come up with a candidate through a primary system.BlueHen86 wrote:I expect that they will. Christie won't be the etch-a-sketch guy that is required to survive the GOP primary mine field.Chizzang wrote:
Watch....they will
But from the GOP standpoint, it's hard to see them fading away like some people are insinuating. Right now they are losing Presidential races because of their backwards approach to social issues - gay rights, women's rights, and immigration. However, as time moves on, things like those aren't going to be sharp issues anymore - the old people who don't budge on those matters will be gone, and young people coming forward, in both parties, are less and less divided on those issues. There will always be two parties in this country, and the GOP won't always be at the disadvantage they are today on social issues. And heck, it was pretty quick in terms of time for when it went from an advantage to a disadvantage. It'll turn back pretty quickly as these issues become more widely accepted and not as divisive as they've been.



