Agreed, so you should’ve stopped with “who won the election“ to make the point that Trump won despite the popular vote. The second sentence only serves to imply you don’t think CA voters actually matter, which is just ridiculous. Who won the popular vote outside CA means even less than who won it overall. Who won the basketball game the other night outside of Michigan’s 3-pointers?
Of course, even that the fact that Trump won doesn’t change the fact that Clinton was the candidate that the VOTERS preferred in 2016, which was gr8’s original point. He won because of the way the rules are, not because he was the preferred candidate by the majority of voters.
Agreed, so you should’ve stopped with “who won the election“ to make the point that Trump won despite the popular vote. The second sentence only serves to imply you don’t think CA voters actually matter, which is just ridiculous. Who won the popular vote outside CA means even less than who won it overall. Who won the basketball game the other night outside of Michigan’s 3-pointers?
Of course, even that the fact that Trump won doesn’t change the fact that Clinton was the candidate that the VOTERS preferred in 2016, which was gr8’s original point. He won because of the way the rules are, not because he was the preferred candidate by the majority of voters.
You don't get it. Saying HRC won by 3M votes, sounds impressive, until you realize that it was comprised of running up vote totals in places deep blue areas. Trump won the popular vote in the battle ground states, if you want to cite a multi state popular vote total, the popular vote in the purple states is more telling than the overall numbers. The only popular vote that impacts the election is the vote by state. CA voters matters as much as any other voter.