Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Nutmeg Joe Keeps His Big Committee Chairmanship


Ugh. 

So, I'm not at all happy about Senate Democrats deciding to let Joe Lieberman (I-CT) keep his Chairmanship of the important Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee. It seems to me that Jiltin' Joe deserved some meaningful punishment for his over-the-top negative comments about President-elect Obama during the political campaign just ended. Elections do - or should have - consequences as Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) famously said when the Democrats recaptured the Senate in 2006.

Even if we put aside his non-stop stumping for Republican Presidential candidate John McCain, Lieberman's nasty and untrue insinuations that Obama might be some sort of Marxist or that Obama wanted American troops to be defeated on the battlefield were outrageous. The Senator from the Nutmeg State needs to recant those assertions and apologize to the President-elect. It's not likely to happen of course, but it's what a decent man would do.

All that said, I'm trying to make the best I can of the Senate Democrats' decision today. As a practical matter, we Democrats do need Lieberman if we are to have any chance of getting to a sixty seat majority in the Senate. Given ElectBlue's unyielding focus on obtaining that 60-seat majority in the US Senate this year, it would be pretty inconsistent of us to trash totally the notion of allowing Joe to retain some of his privileges for voting with Democratic majority. Without him that magical (though largely symbolic) number just won't happen. In politics, symbolism does matter.

Additionally, it is the clear desire of President-elect Obama to mend fences with Lieberman and to move on from the harsh rhetoric of the campaign. Our new President-to-be deserves some slack now and then. He needs all the help we can reasonably give him for the tough times ahead. So I guess I shouldn't be feeling so nauseous about today's developments, re: Lieberman. Still, I do feel a bit sick to my stomach. Maybe more than a bit, to be honest.

In spite of being an unabashed progressive, I like to think of myself of being a 'Big Tent' kind of Democrat. You know, a guy who sees room in the Party for a range of views even on some very important issues. However, this Lieberman thing challenges my faith in the Big Tent idea. It's not the fact that he is so strongly for the Iraq war or that his anti-terrorism shtick borders on xenophobia or even that he brandishes his religion like a sword in the town square of public discourse. 

No, it's more than differences over policy positions that cause me such agita about Mr. Lieberman. You know, here it is: I just don't trust him. On some visceral, gut level I often find myself wondering just what Joe Lieberman's real priorities are. What does this man really stand for? Somewhere in his talk, in his loquacious pontifications there is something that makes me ask myself: "who does this man really represent?". It's that uncertainty that makes me always just a little queasy when I think about Jiltin' Joe

So, alright, I'll try to get over it. I sure as hell will feel much better about the Lieberman thing if we win all three still unresolved Senate races: Alaska, Minnesota and Georgia. Having Senators Begich, Franken and Martin on Capitol Hill next year would go a long way towards settling my uneasy stomach.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Dixie Is Losing Its Political Relevance


Today's New York Times has a thought-provoking and insightful analysis of this year's Presidential election. The article, written by Adam Nossiter, focuses on the diminishing influence of the South in national elections caused by the complete dominance of the GOP in the region. If there had ever been any doubts about the Republicans' vice-like grip on Dixie, they were removed on November 4th.

Reaching many of the same conclusions we drew in our Hold-Recapture-Add blog earlier this week, Nossiter points out that the South has lost its ability to dictate that the Democratic ticket contain at least one Southerner. The Obama-Biden team is the first totally non-Southern Democratic ticket to win the White House since FDR, with Iowa native Henry Wallace as his VP, achieved that feat in 1940.

Worse yet, Dixie has become the only truly reliable base of what is now a very regionalized - and therefore highly marginalized - Republican Party. With the South so firmly in the GOP camp, it is one of those paradoxes of politics that Southern influence over the selection of the next Republican national ticket will also be severely limited. Republicans will simply be forced to give non-Southerners high profile slots on their Presidential tickets in order to be competitive on the national electoral map.

The Southern strategy of Richard Nixon has not only taken deep root in Dixie, it is sufficiently strong to ensure GOP victory in Dixie even in a year when all the headwinds were strongly against them. Nossiter's conclusion as to why the South, bucking the trend in every other part of the nation this year, went so overwhelmingly for the Republican team of McCain-Palin is as obvious as it is painful: race. 

The verdict of Appomattox, it seems, has yet to be accepted by far too many white Southerners.  Maybe it will come in time. After all, it has only been just over one hundred and forty-three years...

Saturday, November 8, 2008

The First Law of Politics


"When your opponents are shooting themselves in the foot, do not take away their guns."

I'm sure I'm only one of millions of dedicated Democrats who are thoroughly enjoying the circular firing squad that the Republicans have formed since being routed by the voters on Tuesday.  

From the vicious attacks on Sarah Palin by the mortally wounded remnants of the McCain campaign, to the increased sniping between what remains of the Conservative intelligentsia and the "dumb is good" wing of the GOP, it's all candy for me. This is political in-fighting on an Olympic scale, garnished with the distinctive flavor of the ancient Roman colosseum. Dulce et decorum est...

Let the games continue.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Hold-Recapture-Add: Making Geopolitics Work


As I examine some of the underlying truths of President-elect Obama's epic campaign and history-shattering election victory, one of my conclusions is that America has experienced a political realignment of sorts.

Even a brief review of the voting patterns in Tuesday's election reveals some very interesting details about the changing political landscape of the nation and of the two major political parties. When you look at this year's electoral map, one thing jumps out at you immediately. There is a geographic coherence to the 2008 election results. A quick comparison to the electoral maps from 2000 and 2004 confirms this idea. 

It seems that political allegiance in the US is increasingly linked to geographical location. This trend appears stronger than at any time since the run-up to the Civil War or, at least, since the period immediately following Reconstruction. Even in a time of great economic stress and two foreign wars, America's political fault-lines more and more follow geographical boundaries.  

It seems clear that the Obama campaign leveraged this geopolitical reality in order to put together a decisive electoral college victory. I call their strategy the 'hold-recapture-add' approach. It was an elegant strategy that maximized the use of advertising dollars and other resources while allowing the campaign to get full benefit of the increasing regionalization of American politics.

The idea was simple: Hold the Kerry 2004 states, recapture the two Gore states (IA and NM) that Kerry did not win four years ago and add as many other states with similar demographics and good prospects as practical. That turned out to be seven: OH, IN, VA, NC, FL, CO and NV. Note that, save for FL, all of the Obama add-ons physically adjoin the Gore-Kerry base. Is it a mere coincidence that these states are all contiguous? I don't think so. 

Let's examine how this geopolitical strategy played out in practice.

A closer look at Obama's victory margins by state tells the tale. In every Gore-Kerry state, Obama equalled or improved on his predecessors' popular vote performance. The Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states, already deep blue, got even bluer. The sole 'barely-blue' exception in this region, New Hampshire, narrowly lost by Gore and barely won by Kerry, gave Obama a double-digit victory this time around. Otherwise, already large Democratic margins improved substantially in places like New York, New Jersey and Vermont. Most importantly, Obama far outpaced the previous Democratic tickets' margins in Pennsylvania, thwarting the McCain campaign's quixotic efforts to poach the Keystone State. 

The Midwestern states also showed dramatic increases in the Democratic nominee's share of the popular vote. Wisconsin, narrowly carried by the Democrats in 2000 and 2004, gave Obama a crushing 13 point victory over John McCain. The story was much the same in MI and MN. Iowa, which Gore won by a whisker in 2000 and Kerry lost by another whisker in 2004, provided Obama with an easy 9-point victory. 

Most importantly, Ohio and Indiana (sandwiched between Illinois, Michigan and Pennsylvania) switched from the GOP column to the Democratic candidate. This shift gave Obama a complete run of the Midwest except for Missouri, where an extremely tight race is still not officially settled. For the moment, it appears McCain may eke out a very tiny win in Missouri. (Much of Missouri is, after all, an extension of the Upper South. See below for a detailed discussion of that region.)

The Great Plains and northern Rockies remained firmly Republican, although it's noteworthy that Obama did better than either Gore or Kerry in every one of these states (ND, SD, NE, KS, MT, WY, UT and ID). Some efforts were made in this region by the Obama campaign, but any gains here have to be attributed to DNC Chair Howard Dean's brilliant fifty-state strategy which put the Republicans on defense even where the Democratic ticket had few prospects.

Further west, Obama easily held the Pacific coast states (WA, OR, CA) and Hawaii. Once again, his popular vote margins in each of these four states easily outdistanced both Gore and Kerry. To his list of far-west wins, Obama added California's eastern neighbor, Nevada, a state that neither Gore nor Kerry had won. Remarkably, Obama won the Silver State by 14 percentage points! In the far northwest Pacific, Alaska, with its Governor on the GOP ticket, remained very red but even there Obama did noticeably better than Gore or Kerry.

In the Southwest, Obama continued his 'hold-recapture-add' strategy. Retaking the Democratic base state of New Mexico (which Gore had won by the tiniest of margins in 2000), Obama expanded into the adjoining state of Colorado. In New Mexico, he won by an astounding 15 point margin and easily carried CO with a sound 8 point lead.  Interestingly, even in John McCain's home state of Arizona, Obama got as large a share of the popular vote as either Kerry or Gore had been able to do in the previous two cycles.
 
In the deep South, things get very interesting. Obama managed to "re-capture" Florida, lost soundly by Kerry in 2004 and (arguably) 'won' narrowly by Gore in the infamous 2000 debacle. Other than a rather loose geographic border with GA and AL, there is not very much that is Southern about Florida these days. Demographically and politically, the Sunshine State is some sort of eccentric mix of the new Southwest and the old Northeast. Go figure.

In the remainder of the deep South (SC, GA, AL, MS, LA and TX) , Obama somewhat outperformed Gore and Kerry everywhere except LA (Katrina effect?), but he still lost all of these states to McCain. Heavy voter turnout among the relatively large African-American and (in the case of Texas) Latino populations no doubt boosted Obama above the Gore-Kerry levels in this region. 

The Upper South, where the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic states meet the old Confederacy, is perhaps the most fascinating - and instructive - region of the 2008 election. Obama underperformed (or barely equalled) both Gore and Kerry in OK, AR, TN, KY and WV. Lacking large African-American populations or significant numbers of young voters or upscale, college-educated whites, Obama had no natural base from which to operate here. Evangelical Christians and socially conservative lower-income whites dominate the electorate in this part of the Upper South.

The two eastern-most states of the Upper South (Virginia and North Carolina) presented a very different picture this cycle. In recent years, Virginia has been trending more and more blue, becoming ever more like its Mid-Atlantic neighbors to the north while losing the historic similarity to its sister states of the old Confederacy. With more and more minorities, upscale whites, young people and college grads, the Old Dominion was fertile ground for Obama - and his campaign took full advantage of that fact. Breaking a forty-four year-old GOP lock on Virginia's electoral votes, Obama won the state by slightly more than four points.

North Carolina, the last of the Upper South states to consider, is very nearly a unique case. With a large African-American population, a growing Latino minority, lots of younger voters and above-average percentages of college graduates, the Tarheel State is in many ways not unlike its neighbor to the north, Virginia. However, the mountainous areas of western NC are demographically and culturally more akin to Tennessee and West Virginia. There are proportionately more lower-income, less well-educated whites here than in Virginia although that too is slowly changing. Hence the extremely close race in North Carolina, where Obama appears to have won by less than 1% of the vote in a state that has not gone for a Democrat in a generation.

County level Presidential results throughout the country, as well as results for US House races and local contests, confirm what is all too visible at the state level. The Republican Party's greatest strength is increasingly confined to areas with voters who are overwhelmingly white, lower-income and less well-educated than the country as a whole. 

In regional terms, the GOP has become an endangered species in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. It is in full retreat throughout the Midwest. It is losing ground even in its Great Plains and Rockies heartland. While still holding on in the interior parts of the Pacific coast states, the Republican Party has all but ceased to be an equal player in any state west of the Rockies. Only in the Deep South and, especially, in the Upper South do the Republicans still hold a firm grip on political power. 

It will be interesting to see how the emerging new Republican leadership sets about tackling their party's shrinking electoral prospects. It's a daunting task. As a committed Democrat, I'm not going to lose much sleep if it takes them a while to figure it out.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Dixville Notch Surprise: Obama!


For the first time in forty years, a Democrat has won the Presidential vote in the the tiny New Hampshire village of Dixville Notch. Here are the results, just announced a few moments ago:

Barack Obama: 15 votes

John McCain: 6 votes

Ralph Nader: 0 votes

The last Democrat to win in Dixville Notch was Hubert Humphrey in 1968. See our earlier post about this quaint New England village's tradition of voting at midnight and counting the votes immediately.

Our Final Electoral Vote Projection: Obama-Biden!


It's crunch time and we're not going to be coy - or equivocal - about our final electoral vote projection for 2008. For this final prediction we have assigned all toss-up states to one candidate or the other. We have also eliminated the distinction between a state that is leaning to a candidate and one that is solidly for a candidate.   

When the votes are counted tomorrow night, the electoral votes of every state will be awarded to one ticket or the other with no toss-ups and no difference based on margin of victory. Our final projection now conforms to the harsh reality of American Presidential elections.

That said, there are no changes to the states we indicated in our last projection were in the Obama column or the McCain column. Now they all show up on our map as either solid blue or solid red - the pale shading is gone. 

That gave Obama a starting point of 338 EVs and McCain 160 EVs for our final projection.  We then had to assign our previous toss-up states (four) and their electoral votes (forty) to one side or the other. Using the latest polling data, some historical trends, the available early voting data and some subjective assessments based on our experience with these states, we made the following assignments:


North Dakota (3 votes): to McCain

Indiana (11 votes): to McCain

Missouri (11 votes): to Obama

North Carolina (15 votes): to Obama

This brings Barack Obama to a total of 364 Electoral Votes and John McCain to 174.

The map to the right shows how we think the race will end up after all the votes are counted. It's nothing short of an electoral landslide for the Obama-Biden ticket. 

Now we're going to cross our fingers and hope that we are right.




Daily Tracking Polls: Righteous Wind Is Blowing


Here are the tracking poll results for today, November 3rd.

Gallup Daily Tracking*:  Obama 55%, McCain 44%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 46%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 45%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 45%

*Final Pre-Election Estimate

Friday, October 31, 2008

Today's Tracking Polls: All Treat, No Trick


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 31st.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 43%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 47%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 48%, McCain 41%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 45%

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Today's Tracking Polls: Five More Days


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 30th.

Gallup Daily Tracking*:  Obama 51%, McCain 44%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 46%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 48%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 45%

*Note: Beginning today, and continuing for the rest of this election cycle, we will be using the Gallup Daily Tracking poll of likely voters rather than registered voters. At about this point in past campaigns, polls of likely voters have become more meaningful than those of registered voters. The other three tracking polls in our daily posting have already been using likely voter models for at least a couple of weeks. 

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Today's Tracking Polls: Cruise Control


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 29th.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 42%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 47%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 49%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 44%

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Today's Tracking Polls: Last Tuesday in October


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 28th.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 43%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 46%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 43%

Monday, October 27, 2008

Daily Tracking Polls: Monday Maintenance


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 27th.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 42%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 46%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 42%

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Daily Tracking Polls: Steady Obama Lead


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 26th.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 43%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 44%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 40%

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Maybe it just sounds stupid... or maybe it IS stupid


Each day, the guys at Politico.com give a 'winner of the day' award to either John McCain or Barack Obama, depending on how they perceive the day to have gone for each candidate. They also write a little piece describing the reasons for their decision. Until now, they've done a fairly good job, I think.  

Today, however, the Politico gurus must have been struck by a case of mass stupidity or maybe they experienced a massive drop in their collective IQs. Whatever the case, they decided that McCain had 'won' the day. Their decision would be hard enough to fathom under any rationale (given the current state of the race and of McCain's campaign), but wait till you read their reasons. McCain won the day, they argued, for "soldiering on amid a debacle".

It's a good thing guys like these weren't covering the Battle of the Little Big Horn. The Politico headline the next day would have screamed: General Custer Wins The Day!

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Well, If This Doesn't Beat It All...


I've been following Presidential election campaigns closely since the Kennedy-Nixon race of 1960 and I don't think I've ever heard anything like this. Citing the Associated Press, Wonkette is reporting that Republican nominee John McCain will not address his supporters election night at the 'Victory Party' planned for a Phoenix hotel. Instead, senior aides to the Arizona Senator say that he will deliver "post-election" remarks to a small group of reporters and "guests" on the hotel lawn. No indication what "post-election" might mean. The evening of November 4th?  The morning of November 5th? Thanksgiving weekend? New Years Eve?

Say what, Mr. McCain? No address to your supporters? No "thank you" delivered to them directly? You gotta be kidding. No victory claim (in the very unlikely event you manage to pull that off)? No concession and congratulations to Barack Obama (looking to be very necessary at this point) in front of your supporters? What the heck are you thinking? 

So here we are, some eleven days and 12 hours until the first polls open on election day, and you, Mr. McCain, are already leaking your intention to display once again the petulant, unsportsmanlike behavior on election night that has become the hallmark of your failed campaign. 

Unbelievable.

Et tu, Montana?


The folks at the RNC must be popping aspirin like jelly beans today. Just look at these numbers for the Big Sky State from a newly-released poll conducted by Montana State University.

Obama: 44%

McCain: 40% 

The Illinois Senator out-polled McCain among Big Sky independents, while both candidates held their party bases by large margins. As we have seen in other polls, the economy was the number one concern among Montana voters, giving Obama his edge with the independent bloc. The poll was conducted October 16 through October 20.

Today's Tracking Polls: It's An Obama Thursday


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 23rd.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 50%, McCain 43%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 52%, McCain 45%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 48%, McCain 43%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 41%

Holy Hoosier, Batman!


A newly released series of polls from Big Ten Battleground gives this astounding result:

Indiana:  Obama 51%, McCain 41% !

Other Big Ten polls released this morning:

Ohio:  Obama 53%, McCain 41%

Pennsylvania:  Obama 52%, McCain 41%

Wisconsin:  Obama 53%, McCain 40%

Michigan:  Obama 58%, McCain 36%

Minnesota:  Obama 57%, McCain 38%

Iowa:  Obama 52%, McCain 39%

Wow!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Today's Tracking Polls: It's Still All Obama


Here are the tracking poll results for today, October 22nd.

Gallup Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 42%

Rasmussen Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 45%

Diageo/Hotline Daily Tracking:  Obama 47%, McCain 42%  

Research 2000 Daily Tracking:  Obama 51%, McCain 41%

Note: Readers who are interested in a thorough and thoughtful analysis of all of the current election cycle's daily tracking polls, their strengths and weaknesses, should read what Nate Silver has to say.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Florida's Undecided Voters Now Leaning to Obama


The St. Petersburg Times reports that its focus group of undecided Florida voters has shifted dramatically towards Barack Obama in the past two months. Interviews conducted with these voters in late August found them "decidedly antagonistic" towards the Illinois Senator, with a number of them leaning towards voting for Republican John McCain. Now, however, nine of the carefully selected undecideds are planning to vote for Obama, while one remains "torn" and only one is supporting McCain

What has pushed these voters into the Obama camp? In two words: Sarah Palin. Many in the focus group view the Alaska Governor as "unqualified", "divisive" and "grating". Also figuring prominently in these voters'  decision to vote for Obama was a dramatic change in their perceptions of his character, integrity and willingness to seek advice from all quarters, even from those who might disagree with some of his policy positions.

Citing his observations of the two Presidential candidates over the past two months, one previously undecided voter who is now going to vote for Obama, said, "I was looking at their character... watching them, their movements, hand gestures, faces... you can tell."