Showing posts with label North Dakota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Dakota. Show all posts

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Electoral Projection: Tightening the Vice

John McCain hasn't found the game changer he's been looking for. For McCain, game changers probably don't exist unless you count Sarah Palin. One could argue that she changed the course of McCain's campaign from the very beginning. McCain's sinking ship has been on the wrong course from the very moment he chose Palin as his running mate. When all is said and done, historians might look at the Palin pick as one of those rare moments when the veep pick actually did matter.

Over the last few weeks, we've witnessed very little change in polling. What small gains there may have been for John McCain have now evaporated (see dead cat bounce). Regular national polls and daily trackers are all now starting to come together for the first time. All of them have the race close to or at double digits. State polling continues to favor Obama as well. 



From our last projection, John McCain loses 14 electoral votes while Barack Obama's score remains unchanged. Polls in North Dakota and Indiana put the race at a dead heat. As a result, both states shift from leans McCain to tossup this week. Voters in North Dakota have been surveyed just three times in October. Obama has led in two of those polls while one other shows the race a tie. Polls back home in Indiana show a close race although Obama has led in three of the last four

Although we're not adding any states to Obama's total, he has strengthened his lead in these states:  New Mexico, Minnesota and Maine. As a result, these states move from leans Obama to solid Obama.  We now show Obama with a solid lead in all of the Kerry/Gore states (264 electoral votes).

McCain's sole route to 270 now runs through Pennsylvania. For him to win there, it will take even more than a game changer. Something along the lines of divine order may be McCain's only hope. The latest polls in the Keystone state show Obama gripping a double digit lead.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

The NRA in MT, ND, & SD


Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota.  Bleeding red states?  It doesn't appear so any longer.  If you've been following polls over the last several weeks, you'll know already that Barack Obama is giving John McCain a run for his money where the Great Plains meets the Rocky Mountains.

A senior NRA official, in Nashville for a GOP fundraiser, told me today, "We're surprised it's so close."   

Close indeed.

Here are the lastest polls from July:
MT  Rasmussen July 1, 2008 (500 LV) Obama 48 McCain 43 Obama +5
ND Rasmussen July 8, 2008 (500 LV) Obama 46 McCain 47 McCain +1
SD Rasmussen July 9, 2008 (500 LV) Obama 43 McCain 47 McCain +4
Source: Real Clear Politics "Latest Polls"

But how close this race remains is yet to be seen.  When pressed, the same official revealed a likely NRA campaign in these and other western states.

"We're gonna see if he can take a hard punch." 

Who would have ever doubted that?  The NRA is expected to spend as much as $18 million during this election cycle.

However, dealing with Senator McCain's real record on gun control may prove tough for the pro-gun organization.  McCain and the NRA have had "high profile disagreements" in the past, and if the NRA keeps their promise not to sugarcoat a candidate's record, they may well find it difficult to persuade voters and their contributers that John McCain is worth the fight.

In 2004, The National Review published a "second amendment tip sheet," which highlighted NRA ratings for members of Congress.  McCain's grade from the NRA's Political Victory Fund was a C.  Even worse was his grade from Gun Owners Of America, an F-.  His overall rating from the NRA is a C+.

McCain's record is spotty at best.  He opposed an extension of the assault weapons ban.  But McCain's divorce from the NRA was made final for many members when he supported a bill that would have placed a federal ban on all gun shows.  Campaign finance reform, another hot button with the NRA, literally has McCain's name written all over it.  That didn't set well either.

Although Obama and the NRA aren't exactly buddies, McCain will need all the help he can get to carry some of these blue trending western states.  It's a certainty the NRA will be pushing hard for McCain.  It is equally certain that Senator Obama will exploit the many weaknesses in John McCain's second amendment record.