As if John Edwards needed another reason to feel the electoral heat

Front-runners are usually focused on racing each other. They often do not realize that when people cannot decide between two leading candidates -- and it doesn't matter whether we are talking about politicians or consumer appliances -- our decision can be subtly swayed by whoever is in third place.
Psychologists call this the decoy effect: In a perfectly rational world, third candidates should only siphon votes away from one or both of the leading contenders. Under no circumstances should they cause the vote share of either front-runner to increase. In the actual world, however, third candidates regularly have the unintended effect of making one of the front-runners look better than before in the minds of undecided voters.
On This Day
2008
- Yet More Republican Racism: Iowa Republican insults blacks and Muslims
- BREAKING : Eliot Spitzer to confirm resignation at 11:30am
- The public Spitzer persona I knew
- It's over : Eliot Spitzer steps down effective Monday
- Health Action Alert: Help Keep Antibiotics Effective
- Cost of War: How would you spend it?
- Geraldine Ferraro has to leave the Billary campaign because she is white, a woman and not Barack Obama
- VIDEO : Marvin Gaye sings "What's Going On" (with lyrics!)
- Keith Olbermann : "Senator, you are now campaigning, as if Barack Obama were the Democrat, and you… were the Republican"




