The Difference between Presidential and Congressional, and Governor, and Mayoral Politics

IceMan30

Senior Member
Sep 24, 2016
515
18
53
Presidential Politics.

Dependent on Where the Population of the country is most fortified, whether or not the region with the highest population density is in fact the Majority of the country, and what the majority of those people believe.


Congressional Politics.

Less Dependent on regional population fortification in the country, and more dependent on WHAT each state believes, and where the population in that each state is most fortified, and whether that population is in fact the majority of the States...
And what the political mood is.
What kind of politics the country is most in the mood for.

And generally speaking, it is true that the majority of the people in the states are concentrated in one area, ONLY in the Mid-Atlantic region of the Northeast, and the State of California.

Nowhere else in the USA is the American population concentrated in Urban Areas, and that is the majority of the state.

In Governor's politics.

It is entirely state level.
It depends mostly on where the people are in the state, and whether the people in the most fortified areas of the state are in fact the majority of the state and WHAT they believe, if they are the majority of the state.

Again... it is only true in the Mid-Atlantic region of the Northeast, and in the State of California that the majority of the state's population is concentrated in one area.


In Mayoral Politics.
That's where things are much simpler and concrete.

You are going to win, if you espouse a stronger agreement with what the people in the locality believe, and if you are a member of the political party that the majority of the locality belongs to.

And the voting margin is similar to that of a dictatorship.
Because it is such a small political jurisdiction.


And Economic policy is the SOLE domain of Congressional Politics.
 

Forum List

Back
Top