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- Tue Oct 01, 2019 11:05 am
#105752
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (C).
The stimulus makes the argument that incumbent political leaders will remain in power after the upcoming elections because voter confidence in the economy favors incumbents. However, the only premise to support this idea is that investors are confident in the economy. Thus, this argument only makes sense if we can link the ideas of investors attitudes and voter attitudes - we're looking for an answer choice that does this.
Answer choice (A): We don't need this to be true. We don't need to make a case for why voters might want to retain incumbent leaders, we need to use the journalist's own argument to assess what assumption they are relying on.
Answer choice (B): Don't need this to be true - we still need to link investors and voters.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This answer equates voter choice with investor choice. Adding this information into the stimulus would let us say investors are confident of increased growth of the economy their economic attitudes don't differ much from voters in general voters in general are confident in the economy voter confidence in the economy factors incumbent political leaders party in power is likely to retain power
Answer choice (D): If this is true, why would the party in power stay in power? The recent state of political news has been depressing, so wouldn't voters want a new party in power? This has to be false.
Answer choice (E): If this is true, how can we say whether the party in power will stay in power? We don't know how much they won by, and if it was very close, maybe some voters don't stay loyal and the incumbent party is ousted. Also, this answer doesn't provide the missing link of information we're looking for which ties investors and voters together.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (C).
The stimulus makes the argument that incumbent political leaders will remain in power after the upcoming elections because voter confidence in the economy favors incumbents. However, the only premise to support this idea is that investors are confident in the economy. Thus, this argument only makes sense if we can link the ideas of investors attitudes and voter attitudes - we're looking for an answer choice that does this.
Answer choice (A): We don't need this to be true. We don't need to make a case for why voters might want to retain incumbent leaders, we need to use the journalist's own argument to assess what assumption they are relying on.
Answer choice (B): Don't need this to be true - we still need to link investors and voters.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This answer equates voter choice with investor choice. Adding this information into the stimulus would let us say investors are confident of increased growth of the economy their economic attitudes don't differ much from voters in general voters in general are confident in the economy voter confidence in the economy factors incumbent political leaders party in power is likely to retain power
Answer choice (D): If this is true, why would the party in power stay in power? The recent state of political news has been depressing, so wouldn't voters want a new party in power? This has to be false.
Answer choice (E): If this is true, how can we say whether the party in power will stay in power? We don't know how much they won by, and if it was very close, maybe some voters don't stay loyal and the incumbent party is ousted. Also, this answer doesn't provide the missing link of information we're looking for which ties investors and voters together.