Seriously, 6.47% mormon in Nevada, Colorado 2.78% New Mexico 3.21%. You're calling that Heavily Mormon?
Hispanic population is 26.5% in Nevada, Colarado 20.7% New Mexico 46.3%
and back in 2008 Obama got 67% of the hispanic vote. Considering that Romney's immigration stances I really don't see him improving markedly on McCain's performance. The polling thus far has not shown much of a shift at all for who hispanics will vote for. Furthermore the percentage of hispanics in those states would almost certainly have grown since 2008, I don't think the percentage of mormons would have grown. and Obama also had some very impressive winning percentages in those states in 2008. Every reason to believe he has a chance. In fact he seems to be the slight favourite in New Mexico. Wouldn't call it safe but it's leaning that way. I wouldn't bother counting Arizona as even remotely in play not unless Obama wins in a landslide.
As for the rest I wont go into any long discussion here but polls in Ohio, Iowa, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina etc suggest that those states are in play. Here is the state of the map that most people would go by. You might quibble around the margins but it's like the current map in this thread. People aren't seeing anything in the polls that suggests that there is a big movement one way or another. Obama is damaged but so is Romney who is proving to be a mediocre candidate but the best of a bad lot.
http://cookpolitical.com/charts/president/ev_scorecard_2012-02-23_07-56-34.php
Do polls show around 75% of hispanics prefer Obama to Romney, with the rest evenly split between Romney and Undecided? Polls of Mormons skew that heavily toward Romney. It is not quite the same as asking Catholics if they would vote for one of THOSE Bishops, but only because many Catholics have a love/hate relationship with church authority. Romney is Mormon royalty, and NV is the only UT neighbor where Obama won a commanding victory even at the height of his popularity (unless we count NM because of the Four Corners, but unless Romney takes Isaacs advice and puts Rubio on the ticket that seems a likely Obama keeper.) Not only UT, but most of its neighboring states have HUGE Mormon populations, it just is not that noticeable because few of them wear it on their sleeves. The Udalls are Mormon, as is Harry Reid, and do not think for a moment that did not help them win three Senate seats, just as it helped Dean Heller, the other NV Senator, win a fourth (and obviously both UT Senators are Mormon.)
The Mormon church owns the Mountain West and Southwest to an extent AL Southern Baptists can only envy. The only real challenges are NM and AZ, but Romney won the latters primary by about 20% largely due to Mormon turnout. If he gets half that bump in the general election he could win as big as McCain did despite their acrimonious '08 primary fight, but that is the only place beside NM I think Obama can compete, and NM is the only one I think he has a good chance to win.
Other than that, I learned my lesson with MO in 2008; it is hard to argue the Show Me state shows anything but red now. Obama narrowly lost it when far more popular, and only won NC by 1% (as previously noted,) so winning either now looks impossible. That would leave Romney needing just 2 EVs; he could conceivably get them in the split ME vote, but NH should lean heavily Romney also, and without OH or FL Obama would have to hold at least one plus NM AND VA AND IA. If he does that he will OH and/or FL, making the rest irrelevant (unless he wins OH without FL, in which case he will need either VA or NM and IA.)
Well, like I say, Romneys corporate raider career and suggestion we let the Big Three twist in the wind, plus highly unpopular Scott Walkers union antagonism, should make most of the Midwest except IN and OH very difficult for him. Same with PA, though whether PA is Midwestern or New England depends on whom you ask (or which end.) If Sherrod Brown were not taking so much heat for Robamacare, Kasichs echoes of Walker might cost Romney OH as well; as it is, it should be very close (unfortunately, every major OH city shrank in the last decade except very red Cincinatti, which grew nearly 10%.) I expect Democrats will get every Midwest state except IN and possibly OH, just like every year (still cannot believe Obama won IN but lost MO; guess anything can happen.)
The anemic popularity of both candidates makes any true upset unlikely for either. That puts it in the swing states, and even those must be very close to truly be in play. Holding VA would make things much easier for Obama (for one thing, it would be a likely harbinger of holding FL and OH, both of which he won by smaller margins) but the closeness of popular governor Tim Kaines race against George "macaca" Allen raises real questions about that. It also gives VA conservatives motive to show up for a RINO presidential nominee, while that very RINO status will mute the sub/urban lean toward Obama.
It looks dicey for Obama; while he can win by just holding a couple of the big states truly in play, he almost has to, because Romney will nearly run the table in the rest. He won every close state except MT and MO last time (how a Dem can lose MO in a very blue year I do not know) but that is less likely now. It will come down to OH and FL, yet again; the only thing that has really changed in the last 20 years is that PA is almost guaranteed blue (if Kerry can win it ANY Dem can. )
Hispanic population is 26.5% in Nevada, Colarado 20.7% New Mexico 46.3%
and back in 2008 Obama got 67% of the hispanic vote. Considering that Romney's immigration stances I really don't see him improving markedly on McCain's performance. The polling thus far has not shown much of a shift at all for who hispanics will vote for. Furthermore the percentage of hispanics in those states would almost certainly have grown since 2008, I don't think the percentage of mormons would have grown. and Obama also had some very impressive winning percentages in those states in 2008. Every reason to believe he has a chance. In fact he seems to be the slight favourite in New Mexico. Wouldn't call it safe but it's leaning that way. I wouldn't bother counting Arizona as even remotely in play not unless Obama wins in a landslide.
As for the rest I wont go into any long discussion here but polls in Ohio, Iowa, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina etc suggest that those states are in play. Here is the state of the map that most people would go by. You might quibble around the margins but it's like the current map in this thread. People aren't seeing anything in the polls that suggests that there is a big movement one way or another. Obama is damaged but so is Romney who is proving to be a mediocre candidate but the best of a bad lot.
http://cookpolitical.com/charts/president/ev_scorecard_2012-02-23_07-56-34.php
you come out and say that he wont win a few states -though I do agree MO is unlikely. The reason why these states are considered toss ups is that the polling shows it is all close either deadlocked or a narrow advantage for one side. Simply stating otherwise because of a 'mormon' population -where I could say a large hispanic population- doesn't make it less of a toss up.
Do polls show around 75% of hispanics prefer Obama to Romney, with the rest evenly split between Romney and Undecided? Polls of Mormons skew that heavily toward Romney. It is not quite the same as asking Catholics if they would vote for one of THOSE Bishops, but only because many Catholics have a love/hate relationship with church authority. Romney is Mormon royalty, and NV is the only UT neighbor where Obama won a commanding victory even at the height of his popularity (unless we count NM because of the Four Corners, but unless Romney takes Isaacs advice and puts Rubio on the ticket that seems a likely Obama keeper.) Not only UT, but most of its neighboring states have HUGE Mormon populations, it just is not that noticeable because few of them wear it on their sleeves. The Udalls are Mormon, as is Harry Reid, and do not think for a moment that did not help them win three Senate seats, just as it helped Dean Heller, the other NV Senator, win a fourth (and obviously both UT Senators are Mormon.)
The Mormon church owns the Mountain West and Southwest to an extent AL Southern Baptists can only envy. The only real challenges are NM and AZ, but Romney won the latters primary by about 20% largely due to Mormon turnout. If he gets half that bump in the general election he could win as big as McCain did despite their acrimonious '08 primary fight, but that is the only place beside NM I think Obama can compete, and NM is the only one I think he has a good chance to win.
Other than that, I learned my lesson with MO in 2008; it is hard to argue the Show Me state shows anything but red now. Obama narrowly lost it when far more popular, and only won NC by 1% (as previously noted,) so winning either now looks impossible. That would leave Romney needing just 2 EVs; he could conceivably get them in the split ME vote, but NH should lean heavily Romney also, and without OH or FL Obama would have to hold at least one plus NM AND VA AND IA. If he does that he will OH and/or FL, making the rest irrelevant (unless he wins OH without FL, in which case he will need either VA or NM and IA.)
I'd disagree with a couple of the states being toss ups like Michigan -the primary didn't do Romney the likely nominee any favours with Obama significantly up against him in the polls now. In general though the map is reasonable and lines up relatively well with what most of the political experts would suggest.
Well, like I say, Romneys corporate raider career and suggestion we let the Big Three twist in the wind, plus highly unpopular Scott Walkers union antagonism, should make most of the Midwest except IN and OH very difficult for him. Same with PA, though whether PA is Midwestern or New England depends on whom you ask (or which end.) If Sherrod Brown were not taking so much heat for Robamacare, Kasichs echoes of Walker might cost Romney OH as well; as it is, it should be very close (unfortunately, every major OH city shrank in the last decade except very red Cincinatti, which grew nearly 10%.) I expect Democrats will get every Midwest state except IN and possibly OH, just like every year (still cannot believe Obama won IN but lost MO; guess anything can happen.)
The anemic popularity of both candidates makes any true upset unlikely for either. That puts it in the swing states, and even those must be very close to truly be in play. Holding VA would make things much easier for Obama (for one thing, it would be a likely harbinger of holding FL and OH, both of which he won by smaller margins) but the closeness of popular governor Tim Kaines race against George "macaca" Allen raises real questions about that. It also gives VA conservatives motive to show up for a RINO presidential nominee, while that very RINO status will mute the sub/urban lean toward Obama.
It looks dicey for Obama; while he can win by just holding a couple of the big states truly in play, he almost has to, because Romney will nearly run the table in the rest. He won every close state except MT and MO last time (how a Dem can lose MO in a very blue year I do not know) but that is less likely now. It will come down to OH and FL, yet again; the only thing that has really changed in the last 20 years is that PA is almost guaranteed blue (if Kerry can win it ANY Dem can. )
Now That Romney Is Officially the Republican Presidential Nominee: Pick the President!
29/02/2012 08:29:02 PM
- 1242 Views
I agree Romney will be the candidate.
29/02/2012 08:54:52 PM
- 639 Views
I would say the math favors Romney over Obama, but it will probably be close either way.
01/03/2012 03:37:52 PM
- 686 Views
I have never understood the point of the Electoral College.
29/02/2012 11:39:11 PM
- 689 Views
You don't think like a politician then
01/03/2012 12:38:36 AM
- 733 Views
I certainly hadn't considered much of that. I'm glad you posted it. *NM*
01/03/2012 07:15:03 AM
- 310 Views
I also have not seen most of that mentioned in the popular vs. electoral debate.
01/03/2012 02:34:31 PM
- 617 Views
a bit simplistic and unrealistic
02/03/2012 11:44:02 PM
- 659 Views
When illustrating a point realism is not required and simplicity is a plus
03/03/2012 03:04:26 AM
- 673 Views
I have a couple quibbles.
03/03/2012 05:23:46 AM
- 700 Views
Oh, certainly, I'm over-generalizing but I was already getting long-winded
03/03/2012 06:52:04 AM
- 664 Views
What a bunch of waffle!
03/03/2012 10:47:19 AM
- 799 Views
Also I don't like this refrain that implies only the POTUS vote matters
03/03/2012 03:29:58 AM
- 819 Views
IMHO, parliaments choosing prime ministers is LESS democratic than the electoral college.
03/03/2012 05:57:41 AM
- 621 Views
Re: IMHO, parliaments choosing prime ministers is LESS democratic than the electoral college.
03/03/2012 07:02:30 AM
- 657 Views
*is learning*
04/03/2012 09:49:42 PM
- 648 Views
Re: *is learning*
04/03/2012 09:56:16 PM
- 662 Views
Re: *is learning*
05/03/2012 12:08:08 AM
- 700 Views
You could imitate the French.
07/03/2012 10:40:16 PM
- 629 Views
That seems... unlikely....
08/03/2012 03:03:54 PM
- 636 Views
It does, doesn't it?
08/03/2012 06:11:08 PM
- 832 Views
After I thought about it more, I realized France and the US are not so different in that respect.
08/03/2012 08:51:03 PM
- 612 Views
More similar than the other major Western democracies at least, agreed.
08/03/2012 09:32:55 PM
- 589 Views
I did not realize lack of a parliamentary majority dictated his cabinet.
09/03/2012 12:27:31 AM
- 668 Views
I don't know much about Norwegian politics, but you seem to be wrong.
03/03/2012 06:18:08 PM
- 669 Views
Do you happen to have that link, please?
03/03/2012 06:46:31 PM
- 551 Views
Sure.
03/03/2012 06:58:07 PM
- 724 Views
Guess we did not read far enough.
03/03/2012 10:38:07 PM
- 669 Views
Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
03/03/2012 11:49:44 PM
- 872 Views
Hey, man, I am an AMERICAN: I do not HAVE to know ANYTHING!
04/03/2012 11:46:57 PM
- 892 Views
Re: Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
05/03/2012 06:56:24 AM
- 673 Views
The thing is, regions often have national relevance far greater than their populations would suggest
05/03/2012 10:21:26 AM
- 621 Views
Re: Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
08/03/2012 07:11:12 PM
- 624 Views
Many valid reasons, including those Isaac cited.
02/03/2012 02:26:37 AM
- 771 Views
Most states are ignored anyway
02/03/2012 11:56:12 PM
- 847 Views
Only because and to the extent they have already committed themselves.
03/03/2012 03:41:39 AM
- 693 Views
Why would we do something logical? Dude, you're utterly ridiculous. *NM*
05/03/2012 04:53:38 PM
- 365 Views
I'm kind of sad- does this mean Santorum won't be providing wonderful sound bites anymore?
01/03/2012 02:22:31 PM
- 613 Views
Romney or Obama, either way, America loses. *NM*
02/03/2012 01:10:26 AM
- 439 Views
Hard to dispute that either; six of one, half a dozen of the other.
02/03/2012 01:38:07 AM
- 591 Views
I'd agree hope and change was extremely unrealistic
02/03/2012 11:58:57 PM
- 587 Views
Well, you know my story there; I voted for Obama and got Hillary (at best.)
03/03/2012 01:43:20 AM
- 605 Views
Update: Despite rules requiring they be split, the MI GOP is giving Romney BOTH statewide delegates.
02/03/2012 11:10:56 PM
- 698 Views
Romney is damaged
02/03/2012 11:27:33 PM
- 603 Views
Obama is rather damaged also; it will probably come down to FL and OH, yet again.
03/03/2012 02:23:53 AM
- 707 Views
I'm hoping for Rubio as VP... then FL probably won't matter
03/03/2012 04:28:08 AM
- 594 Views
You should put that on your license plates.
03/03/2012 06:41:34 AM
- 717 Views
And what are you basing all of this on?
03/03/2012 09:54:06 PM
- 704 Views
The closeness of several states when Obama was far more popular, and UTs heavily Mormon neighbors.
03/03/2012 11:44:06 PM
- 651 Views
Wrong
04/03/2012 08:08:56 AM
- 778 Views
Higher turnout magnifies the Mormon effect.
04/03/2012 08:08:09 PM
- 815 Views
Your reasoning is flawed and if you can't see it there is no hope for you
05/03/2012 11:39:04 PM
- 722 Views
Yeah, I think we had that conversation already, several times, in fact.
07/03/2012 05:36:45 AM
- 557 Views
Do you have any knowledge of statistics at all?
07/03/2012 09:04:15 PM
- 717 Views
I hate this message board
07/03/2012 09:06:30 PM
- 512 Views
It would probably help if you deleted the stuff from two, three posts back?
07/03/2012 09:25:40 PM
- 628 Views