But to blindly vote on someone based upon their political affiliation makes about as much sense as voting for him because you like his shoes.
An example, limited though it is by being single-issue, was Iowa a couple years ago. The only thing stopping an amendment re-banning gay marriage was that the leader of one side of the legislature wouldn't allow it to come to a vote. His party had only a one seat majority, and there was one district open in a special election. On that subject at least (and because of the increasingly strict divide between parties, probably on many others as well) the views of the individual candidates for that opening became pretty well irrelevant compared to either shifting, or not, the balance of power overall.
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