Thursday, October 30, 2014

Explaining run-offs: Not over yet

AMERICANS wearied by mid-term elections may suppose that November 4th, polling day, will bring blessed relief. Not so fast. With a Republican takeover of the Senate likely but not in the bag, one grisly scenario is that America will have to wait for a December 6th run-off election in Louisiana. Or, even worse, a run-off in Georgia on January 6th, after the new Congress is due to convene.Run-offs—extra elections triggered when no candidate scoops more than 50% of the vote—spread across the South after the Civil War, to stop blacks and Republicans from benefiting from squabbles between different white factions, and to unite votes behind a single, white Democratic candidate.Today several southern states still use them for party primaries. Georgia uses them for general elections, too. Polls suggest that a Libertarian may grab enough Georgia voters to deny an outright majority to either Michelle Nunn, the Democrats’ Senate candidate, or David Perdue, the Republican. In Louisiana, unless one candidate wins a majority on general-election day, the top two candidates meet for a run-off.Republicans triumphed in the most recent Georgia Senate run-offs, in 1992 and 2008, as their older, whiter, more affluent voters proved likelier to turn out for a second round of voting. In Louisiana, Senator Mary Landrieu, the Democratic incumbent, has survived run-offs before. This time would be...






from The Economist: United States http://ift.tt/1tTvedo

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