Presidential Forecast, June 20th

by: Chris Bowers

Fri Jun 20, 2008 at 13:31


Electoral College: Obama 276, McCain 171, Toss-up 91
National popular vote: Obama 47.1%-41.4% McCain


(Dark Blue (169): Obama +10.0% or more
Lean Blue (107): Obama +3.6%-+9.9%
White / Toss-up (91): Obama +3.5% to McCain +3.5%
Lean Red (47): McCain +3.6%-+9.9%
Dark Red (124): McCain +10.0% or more
)

Today, new polls (see here and here) from Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, and Ohio collectively shift the map even further toward Barack Obama. Here are the category changes since the last front-page update:

  • Georgia moves from "Solid McCain" to "Lean McCain"
  • Nevada moves from "Lean McCain" to "Toss-up"
  • New Hampshire moves from "Lean Obama" to "Solid Obama"
  • North Carolina moves from "Lean McCain" to "Toss-up"

In the case of North Carolina, it upgraded not because of new polls, but instead because of an old poll that dropped out of the averages.

Obama is ahead, tied, or within 6.0% in states worth 408 electoral votes. With the campaign starting to press its resource advantage through 3,600 organizing fellows and a widepsread television advertising campaign, and with Republican 527's is the dumps, a true blowout is now within reach. McCain's tenuous support in the southeast is particularly interesting. There isn't a single state in the entire eastern seaboard where McCain holds a solid lead.

State by state details in the extended entry.  

Chris Bowers :: Presidential Forecast, June 20th
Solid Obama: 169 Electoral Votes
State EV's Obama % McCain % Margin # Polls
California 55 51.3% 37.5% +13.8% 4
Connecticut 7 49.5% 39.5% +10.0% 2
D.C. 3 -- -- +80.0% 0
Hawaii 4 61.0% 31.0% +30.0% 1
Illinois 21 59.0% 34.0% +25.0% 2
Maine-AL* 2 53.0% 35.5% +17.5% 2
Maine-01* 1 -- -- +21.0% 0
Maine-02* 1 -- -- +14.0% 0
Maryland 10 52.0% 38.5% +13.5% 2
Massachusetts 12 52.0% 34.0% +18.0% 2
New Hampshire 4 50.5% 39.0% +10.5% 2
New York 31 51.0% 33.5% +17.5% 4
Rhode Island 4 47.5% 34.0% +13.5% 2
Vermont 3 60.0% 32.5% +27.5% 2
Washington 11 51.0% 37.3% +13.7% 3

Lean Obama: 107 Electoral Votes
State EV's Obama % McCain % Margin # Polls
Colorado 9 46.0% 41.0% +5.0% 2
Delaware 3 50.0% 41.0% +9.0% 1
Iowa 7 47.0% 41.5% +5.5% 2
Minnesota 10 49.5% 42.5% +7.0% 2
New Jersey 15 46.5% 39.0% +7.5% 2
New Mexico 5 47.0% 42.5% +4.5% 2
Oregon 7 47.5% 38.5% +9.0% 2
Ohio 20 47.0% 41.7% +5.3% 3
Pennsylvania 21 48.5% 41.5% +7.0% 2
Wisconsin 10 49.0% 41.0% +8.0% 3

Toss-up: 91 Electoral Votes
State EV's Obama % McCain % Margin # Polls
Florida 27 45.0% 44.7% +0.3% 3
Michigan 17 40.7% 42.3% -1.6% 3
Missouri 11 44.3% 44.3% Even 3
Nevada 5 42.0% 44.5% -2.5% 2
North Carolina 15 41.3% 44.3% -3.0% 3
North Dakota 3 42.0% 43.0% -1.0% 2
Virginia 13 46.0% 44.5% +1.5% 2

Lean McCain: 47 Electoral Votes
State EV's Obama % McCain % Margin # Polls
Alaska 3 41.5% 47.0% -5.5% 2
Georgia 15 42.0% 47.5% -5.5% 2
Indiana 11 43.0% 47.0% -4.0% 2
Kansas 6 39.3% 47.7% -8.4% 3
Montana 3 41.0% 47.5% -6.5% 2
Nebraska-02** 1 -- -- -5.0% 0
South Carolina 8 42.0% 48.0% -6.0% 2

Solid McCain: 124 Electoral Votes
State EV's Obama % McCain % Margin # Polls
Alabama 9 33.0% 58.0% -25.0% 3
Arizona 10 38.5% 48.5% -10.0% 2
Arkansas 6 36.0% 52.5% -16.5% 2
Idaho 4 39.0% 52.0% -13.0% 1
Kentucky 8 36.5% 55.0% -18.5% 2
Louisiana 9 38.0% 50.5% -12.5% 2
Mississippi 6 41.5% 52.0% -10.5% 2
Nebraska-AL** 2 36.0% 52.0% -16.0% 3
Nebraska-01** 1 -- -- -10.0% 0
Nebraska-03** 1 -- -- -34.0% 2
Oklahoma 7 29.5% 57.0% -27.5% 2
South Dakota 3 36.0% 49.5% -13.5% 2
Tennessee 11 33.5% 55.5% -22.0% 2
Texas 34 37.5% 52.0% -14.5% 2
Utah 5 33.0% 56.0% -23.0% 2
West Virginia 5 36.0% 49.0% -13.0% 2
Wyoming 3 37.5% 53.5% -16.0% 2

* Maine four electoral votes are awarded as follows: two for the statewide winner, and one for the winner of each congressional district. ME-01 is about 3.5% more Democratic than the state as a whole, while ME-02 is about 3.5% less Democratic than the state as a whole.

** Nebraska's five electoral votes are awarded as follows: two for the statewide winner, and one for the winner of each congressional district. NE-01 is about 6.0% more Democratic than the state as a whole, NE-02 is about 11.0% more Democratic than the state as a whole, and NE-03 is about 18.0% less Democratic than the state as a whole.

Methodology
I will update at least once every day between now and November 4th. The methodology is simple and straightforward.

  1. For each state, take all polls conducted for the state over the previous thirty days, and average them.
  2. If one polling firm has more than one poll in a state over the last thirty days, take only the most recent poll.
  3. Every state has at least two polls. If two polls were not conducted in a state over the last thirty days, use the two most recent polls from any polling firm.
  4. If only one poll has been conducted in a state, then only use that poll.
  5. No polling firm discrimination whatsoever. Polls are never excluded because the organization has a bad or partisan reputation.

As we move closer to the election and more data becomes available, the time frames for polls included in the averages will decrease. Also, when the amount of data increases, I will be able to start projecting the swing, "toss-up" states. Right now, however, there just isn't enough data to push those states into one camp or the other.


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It seems like Obama's very solid states are getting stronger (4.00 / 1)
While McCain's are getting weaker.  Every time you post this I add up the percentages that are above 20% just to estimate where the absolute hopeless states are for each candidate.  If I remember right, McCain had 41 electoral votes in states above 20% last time but now only has 35.  Obama has gone from 29 to 32 electoral votes in >20% states.

John McCain wants to put SS in hedge funds.

SE Coast State Strength--Another Case For Edwards (4.00 / 2)
I have to keep saying this--I am not personally invested in Edwards.  It's just that one after another, more and more cogent reasons keep emerging that make a strong case for him as VP.  This is yet another one.

As a white Southerner who unashamedly taps into the Southern populist tradition, he would not only help us win (or at the very least strongly contest) at least three Southern states (the Carolinas and Virginia), he would help us rebuild long-term biracial support for the Democratic brand, based on an indigenous progressive tradition.

What could be more important than that?

Oh, right.  Re-electing John Barrow.  How foolish of me to forget.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


I hate lag times in polling. (0.00 / 0)
SurveyUSA kept polling Edwards when it seemed he was completely out of the running. But after those statements in Spain they took his name out of contention for their most recent polling. Now that he's opened the window ever so slightly, they haven't caught up yet to put him back into consideration. I imagine the Iowa results from today would be a tad bit different (i.e. a blowout) if they had polled Edwards as well.  

[ Parent ]
Well, Edwards Produced a Blowout In The Last Round (4.00 / 1)
But Obama had a stronger lead head-to-head then, 47-38, compared to 49-45 this time.  

Still, Edwards extended it 3 points more (to 12 points) against Huckabee, who was the strongest GOP VP, up to a whopping 26 points against Pawlenty.

None of these VP choices seems as strong as Huckabee--who, after all, beat the pants, shorts, shoes and socks off of McCain in the Iowa caucuses.  So I think that Edwards would likely have at least added 6 points--as he did against Romney the first time Iowa was polled last month.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


[ Parent ]
I still think Huckabee was the GOP's strongest candidate period. (0.00 / 0)
For the general election.

McCain can't win, he just can't. I don't have much data to back up this assertion, but I stand by it. He is too damn unlikable and uncharismatic. The public hasn't elected a President as horribly unlikable/uncharismatic as McCain since Nixon, and we all know what happened to Nixon's second term (when the television became a big deal in politics).

I said from the first time I saw him on the stump that Mike Huckabee would be the strongest foe for us as Democrats. Sure, maybe he has a lot of dirt and/or wild/outrageous statements we could point to and say he couldn't possibly overcome that but I still think he'd have had a hell of a lot better chance than McCain. Besides, wasn't this even more true for Giuliani?

I think the GOP knows this, and that they have either conceded the election or plan on pulling the old switcharoo with McCain by swapping him out for another candidate before (or possibly after) november using the excuse that he cannot continue "for medical reasons." Short of this scenario I don't see how he could possibly win. This is also part of the reason I'm horrified to find out who he is going to choose as his running mate.

End this war. Stop John McCain. Cindy McCain is filthy rich.


[ Parent ]
I find these possibilities (0.00 / 0)
mighty motivating.

John McCain opposes the GI Bill.

Michigan (0.00 / 0)
The state that baffles me the most is Michigan.    I know that state (at least I think I know that state).    No state has been hit harder by the rough economic times.    I can't think of a state that should want a change more.  

Furthermore, Michigan is a Democratic state.    There Governor and both Senators are Democrats.    


I think Obama can shore it up (0.00 / 0)
by campaigning alot there.

John McCain.  Wrong for America.

[ Parent ]
And he's already started doing that. (0.00 / 0)
We need another poll there. The last one already shows him up by 3.

[ Parent ]
Wait till we get another poll there (0.00 / 0)
There's only been one poll there since Clinton dropped out and it showed Obama ahead by 3. Before that the last poll was at the end of May by Survey USA showing McCain up 41-37. And it showed Obama only picking up 65% of African-Americans. Absolutely will not happen. Obama probably has a 1-5% lead there right now.  

[ Parent ]
Quick editorial note (0.00 / 0)
Chris,

Your "Methodology" section still says:

Also, when the amount of data increases, I will be able to start projecting the swing, "toss-up" states. Right now, however, there just isn't enough data to push those states into one camp or the other.

Of course, you have now begun projecting the "toss-up" states, so I think you can safely remove that text.


Oops (0.00 / 0)
I see; you meant start projecting who will win the toss-up states.

never mind.


[ Parent ]





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