I've started a new thread because I'm thinking both wider than only the US Election, but also thinking 'off-piste'.
We know that the current presidential election has been called the election between two of the least liked candidates - at least in living memory. My question is - what winning level of support would actually leave the elected candidate a lame-duck, perhaps even a dead-duck, from day 1 of their Presidency?
Now, I understand that the average voter turnout for Presidential elections is about 60% (
https://en.wikipedia.org/.../Voter_turnout_in_the_United_States_presidential_elections).
How many of those people -
who actively chose to turn up at the voting booth to cast a vote in some way or other - would it take to make a mockery of any result? I am aware that few, if any, countries count abstentions (I believe they are in Australia, where voting is compulsory but the ballot paper has a 'none of the above' option), but we usually get turnout figures long before the voting results are announced. If the votes recorded for both candidates combined were to come to less than, say, 35% of that turnout figure, and one won by a 51-49% margin of that 'less than 35%' figure, what impact would it have on that person's Presidency?
Put that into the British context, how would it impact on our Parliamentary democracy?