Can someone break this one down? I don't see how B is incorrect, and I don't see how E is correct. Isn't one of the flaws in the argument a past to present flaw (line 6)? Doesn't B call this assumption out that an education party could be different than what has been historically true?
Also, for E, I eliminated it because I thought it strengthened the argument! Isn't the conclusion that the education party isn't going to be viable in the long run? The percent of people is too low for historical standards, and stating that even fewer people would join the party would strengthen that support right? Isn't that what answer choice E does?
Comments
The flaw is that the journalist assumes that the 16 percent that would fund the party would join the political party, and so the education party would only have 26 percent of support. If you keep the two groups separate while supporting the education party, then the total percentage meets the 30 percent historical requirement.
For (B), the argument of the journalist does not support the idea that a smaller base could be possible. Just because it is possible does not mean it is applicable to our situation.
Hope this helps.