PrepTest 22, Section 2, Question 6
Astorga's campaign promises are apparently just an attempt to please voters. What she says she will do if elected mayor is simply what she has learned from opinion polls that voters want the new mayor to do. Therefore, voters are not being told what Astorga actually intends to do if she becomes mayor.
Astorga's campaign promises are apparently just an attempt to please voters. What she says she will do if elected mayor is simply what she has learned from opinion polls that voters want the new mayor to do. Therefore, voters are not being told what Astorga actually intends to do if she becomes mayor.
Astorga's campaign promises are apparently just an attempt to please voters. What she says she will do if elected mayor is simply what she has learned from opinion polls that voters want the new mayor to do. Therefore, voters are not being told what Astorga actually intends to do if she becomes mayor.
Astorga's campaign promises are apparently just an attempt to please voters. What she says she will do if elected mayor is simply what she has learned from opinion polls that voters want the new mayor to do. Therefore, voters are not being told what Astorga actually intends to do if she becomes mayor.
Which one of the following is a questionable assumption on which the argument relies?
If she is elected mayor, Astorga will not be capable of carrying out the campaign promises she has made.
The opinion polls on which Astorga's promises are based do not accurately reflect what voters want the new mayor to do.
Most voters are unlikely to be persuaded by Astorga's campaign promises to vote for her in the mayoral election.
Astorga has no strong opinions of her own about what the new mayor ought to do in office.
Astorga does not actually intend, if elected, to do what she has learned from the public opinion polls that voters want the new mayor to do.
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