Showing posts with label prediction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prediction. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2008

My Prediction in the Presidential Race


"[T]he balance of opinion could change, as it has several times in this campaign, and as it has in the past.

  "Harry Truman was trailing Thomas E. Dewey by 5% in the last Gallup poll in 1948, conducted between Oct. 15 and 25 — the same margin by which Mr. Obama seems to be leading now.

  "But on Nov. 2, 18 days after Gallup's first interviews and eight days after its last, Truman ended up winning 50% to 45%. Gallup may well have gotten it right when in the field; opinion could just have changed."


Michael Barone


I'm 48 years old (49 in about a month), and I've been interested in and observing presidential elections for the last 40 years.

In four decades, I don't think I've ever seen a presidential election campaign that was as capricious as this one.

About a month ago, Barack Obama began to build a lead in the race that, according to some polls, went beyond double digits. That led to some astonishing things.

I heard polls that suggested tight races in states like North Dakota and Montana.

I even heard it suggested that Alaska, the home of the Republican running mate and a GOP stalwart in the half-century of its existence as a state, might vote Democratic if Ted Stevens was convicted in his corruption trial.

Today, a guilty verdict was handed down in Stevens' case, but I don't think it will necessarily cost John McCain the state.

I do, however, think it will make the outcome closer than it would have been.

Less than a week ago, the Associated Press reported that McCain narrowed the gap to a single point in the days following the third debate.

And talk of another cliffhanger was in the air.

Who knows where things will stand a week from today, when the votes are counted?

In the closing days of the campaign, the Philadelphia Inquirer has written about the effort both Obama and McCain have made to win the so-called "red states."

Larry Eichel reports in the Inquirer that McCain has been forced to play defense in the Republican strongholds, but he and his campaign staff continue to believe that one "blue state" could flip sides on Election Day — Pennsylvania.

Eichel writes that Republican strategists conceded awhile ago that the Obama campaign would make gains in some places that traditionally vote for the GOP and that they believed Michigan and Pennsylvania, "with their older populations and socially conservative Democrats," were the best targets to make up for those losses.

But, as Eichel observes, the Republicans have given up on Michigan, leaving only Pennsylvania as a legitimate opportunity.

It may look like a longshot. Pennsylvania hasn't voted for a Republican in 20 years. Yet Eichel suggests that, if McCain can, somehow, capture Pennsylvania, he can still win the election even if he loses Colorado, Iowa and New Mexico (which I now think he will) and Virginia (which I still think he won't).

In making the following predictions, I have reviewed past vote totals, considered newspaper endorsements (the links to many are included in this post) and consulted — to a lesser degree — recent poll results.

But I want to make it clear that I haven't just reviewed the latest polls to see who is leading where and by how much.

I've also checked to see what the approval ratings are.

And I've tried to balance them against voting results in the past and a general assessment of current moods.

A political scientist whose opinions I respect, Michael Barone, wrote a timely article about polling for the Wall Street Journal. When he says that reading polls correctly is "more art than science," he's absolutely right.

Of course, I've tried to keep an eye on the economic indicators and various important local races that could play key roles in the outcome of the presidential race.

They're all pieces of the same jigsaw puzzle.

Much has been said in recent weeks about Obama's inability to "close the deal." Given the poor economy and the unpopular war, Obama should have a double-digit lead over McCain, I've been told.

Have some voters been resisting the Obama candidacy? Is it racial?

I don't know if part of it is racial. Maybe it is.

In my opinion, several factors are at work here:
  • At least part of it may have something to do with the fact that the "surge" in Iraq appears to have worked well enough that the Bush administration is reportedly expanding its plans for withdrawing the troops.

    A year ago, the war was expected to be the most contentious issue in the campaign.

  • Another part may have to do with the fact that, while the economy continues to struggle, Americans have seen a sharp decline in gas prices recently. And the leading indicators were up in September.

    The stock market still resembles a runaway roller coaster, and some votes may depend on whether it enjoys a triple-digit gain or suffers a triple-digit loss the day before the election.

  • And I think part of it is uncertainty about the participation level of the young.

    Jurek Martin writes about that in the Financial Times, saying, "Peak turnout among the under-30s was 55% in 1972, the first election after the voting age was lowered from 21 to 18. That had slipped to about 40% by 2000, but its rise four years ago reflected the intensity of a campaign, held as the war in Iraq became bogged down, that produced a record overall participation."

    It can be more problematic for pollsters to attempt to measure the voting attitudes of people under 30 than any other age group. As Martin points out, many people who are under 30 use only mobile phones these days, and there is no public directory for those numbers.

    And some of the questions that pollsters use to differentiate between an ordinary respondent and a "likely voter" tend to disqualify young voters who will be voting for the first time — because they have no prior history of participation.

    Sort of a Catch-22, isn't it? Can't vote if you're not old enough, but pollsters only give respondents the heft of the "likely voter" designation if they've voted before.

    It's kind of tough for 18- or 19-year-olds to meet that standard.

    Voters under 30 supported Kerry in 2004, but they represented only 17% of the total vote. Voters over 30 supported Bush.

    Will young voters feel more inclined to participate in 2008? And if they do, how will the pollsters be able to tell ahead of time?
It's hard to measure those elements in the equation — just as it's hard to measure how many votes will be influenced by race.

But if race plays a significant role in the final outcome, that will have to be something that historians and political scientists will determine after studying the results at length and in depth.

Circumstances may make it a topic of conversation on Election Night, but anything more than speculation will require extensive post-election inquiry and the gathering of evidence to support the findings.

In other words, if race is a factor in the outcome, I don't think we'll know until it's much too late to do anything about it.
I predict that McCain will win these states:
  1. Alabama (9): McCain 59%, Obama 41% — Obama has the support of the Tuscaloosa News and the Montgomery Advertiser, but I don't think it will help him. Jimmy Carter, in 1976, was the last Democrat to receive a majority of the vote in Alabama.

    The state's largest newspaper, the Birmingham News, endorsed McCain. No surprise — it endorsed Bush four years ago.

  2. Alaska (3): McCain 57%, Obama 43% — The GOP should hold Sarah Palin’s home state — in spite of Ted Stevens' conviction and the fact that the Anchorage Daily News endorsed Obama. (For the record, the Daily News also endorsed Kerry in 2004.)

  3. Arizona (10): McCain 57%, Obama 43% — McCain should win his home state, but there are many retirees in Arizona who are nervous about the financial crisis.

    Still, it should surprise no one that the Arizona Republic endorsed McCain.

  4. Arkansas (6): McCain 55%, Obama 45% — Obama was endorsed by the liberal alternative newspaper in Little Rock, the Arkansas Times, but Arkansas hasn't voted for a non-native Democrat since supporting Jimmy Carter in 1976.

  5. Florida (27): McCain 49%, Obama 47% — Florida is a hotly contested (as usual) "swing" state that McCain absolutely must have to win in the Electoral College.

    McCain might not win the presidency even if he carries Florida, but he is virtually certain to lose if he does not.

    He has been endorsed by the Tampa Tribune and the Bradenton Herald.

    The Herald supported Kerry against Bush in 2004.

    Obama has been endorsed by the Miami Herald, the Orlando Sentinel, the St. Petersburg Times, the West Palm Beach Post, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, the Daytona Beach News-Journal, Melbourne's Florida Today, the Lakeland Ledger and the Naples Daily News. The Lakeland and Naples papers endorsed Bush four years ago.

  6. Georgia (15): McCain 53%, Obama 43% — McCain's campaign has been endorsed by the Savannah Morning News. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution supports Obama.

    Neither is a surprise. Nor should the outcome be one, either — although Obama has not been without his victories in the South. Case in point would be Sunday's endorsement from the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, which endorsed Bush four years ago.

  7. Idaho (4): McCain 64%, Obama 35% — Does it surprise you that the Idaho Statesman endorsed Obama? It shouldn't. The Statesman endorsed Kerry in 2004. Kerry still lost Idaho, 69% to 30%.

  8. Indiana (11): McCain 53%, Obama 47% — The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette endorsed Obama. Its endorsement of Kerry in 2004 didn't help him in Indiana; the Democrat lost there, 60% to 39%.

    Obama also has been endorsed by the Richmond Palladium-Item, which endorsed Bush in 2004, and the Muncie Star Press, which endorsed no one.

    The Indianapolis Star reported Sunday that its editorial board "remains evenly divided" and won't endorse anyone. The paper supported Bush four years ago.

  9. Kansas (6): McCain 56%, Obama 44% — In the last 40 years, no Democrat has received 45% or more of the vote in Kansas.

    McCain has been endorsed by the Lawrence Journal-World. The Journal-World endorsed no one in 2004.

  10. Kentucky (8): McCain 53%, Obama 46% — When Bill Clinton carried Kentucky in 1992 and 1996, he did so both times with less than 50% of the vote. Of course, Ross Perot was on the ballot as an independent both times.

    Most Democrats have struggled in Kentucky in recent decades. Since Adlai Stevenson narrowly defeated Dwight Eisenhower there in 1952, Democrats have lost Kentucky in nine out of 13 presidential elections.

    The Lexington Herald-Leader and the Louisville Courier-Journal have endorsed Obama. In 2004, they both endorsed Kerry, who lost Kentucky by 60% to 40%.

  11. Louisiana (9): McCain 58%, Obama 41% — Louisiana's black vote (and probably, with it, any hope Obama may have had of winning there) was decimated by Hurricane Katrina.

    Louisiana was one of a few Southern states that supported Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, but it was close enough that one suspects he might not have succeeded without the help of the black voters in the state.

    And, when one goes farther back into Louisiana's political history, you find that the state supported George Wallace in 1968, Barry Goldwater in 1964 and Strom Thurmond in 1948. Voters there have never hesitated to support someone just because he wasn't likely to win.

    The New Orleans Times-Picayune, which endorsed no one in 2004, supports Obama. He's also been endorsed by the Shreveport Times, which supported Kerry. Will that make a difference?

  12. Mississippi (6): McCain 57%, Obama 42% — Democrats who have run without the benefit of incumbency have received about 40% of the vote, if that, in Mississippi since Jimmy Carter was elected in 1976.

  13. Montana (3): McCain 53%, Obama 46% — Voting patterns suggest that Montana will be in the Republican column, even though the Billings Gazette endorsed the Democrats. The Gazette endorsed no one in 2004.

  14. Nebraska (5): McCain 60%, Obama 39% — Running as an incumbent in 1996, Bill Clinton received 35% of the vote in Nebraska. Since 1968, only two Democrats (Jimmy Carter in 1976 and Michael Dukakis in 1988) have done better — and no Democrat has received more than 40% of the vote in Nebraska since Lyndon Johnson won the state in 1964.

    The Lincoln Journal Star has endorsed McCain. It sided with Bush four years ago.

  15. Nevada (5): McCain 49%, Obama 48% — It looks like a close race in Nevada so I'm sure that, if given a choice, the McCain camp is pleased to have the endorsement of the 199,602-circulation Las Vegas Review-Journal instead of the 174,341-circulation Las Vegas Sun, which endorsed Obama.

    Neither endorsement was a surprise. In 2004, the Review-Journal endorsed Bush, the Sun endorsed Kerry.

    The Reno Gazette-Journal endorsed Obama's candidacy this weekend. It supported Kerry in 2004.

  16. North Carolina (15): McCain 50%, Obama 48% — North Carolina may be a political enigma until the votes are counted.

    In one of the races on the ballot, Sen. Elizabeth Dole has been fighting for a second term, in spite of the fact that she has high favorability ratings and a significant campaign war chest.

    Her success may depend on how the GOP presidential ticket fares in North Carolina. Historically, that wouldn't be a problem because the Tar Heel State has backed every Republican nominee but one (Gerald Ford in 1976) since 1968.

    Polls have indicated a tight race in North Carolina, though, and some pundits have predicted that Obama will win there. If Obama wins, will he have coattails long enough to win the Senate seat for the Democrats, who crave a 60-seat filibuster-proof majority?

    Even though he has received some endorsements in North Carolina, three of them (the Raleigh News & Observer, the Asheville Citizen-Times and the Wilmington Star-News) endorsed Kerry four years ago, and the others endorsed no one.

    As Steve Harrison and Ted Mellnik have written in the News & Observer, the outcome may depend on whether 2008 is the year that persistent efforts to register young voters pay off in actual participation.

    That brings me to another point.

    Although much has been said about the youth vote this year — how it was, in part, responsible for launching Obama's candidacy in the Iowa caucuses and how it has given him "rock star" receptions across the country — I have heard of only one college newspaper (the Duke Chronicle) that has endorsed him against McCain — but I can't verify that information because the Chronicle does not seem to have posted the editorial on its web site at the time of this writing.

    Perhaps other college newspapers will recommend him — or anyone — to their readers in the coming week.

    But, to date, the Chronicle is the only college newspaper that I've been told has encouraged its readers to vote for someone in the presidential election.

  17. North Dakota (3): McCain 55%, Obama 44% — Last week, Larry Sabato shifted North Dakota to "toss-up" status in his presidential election projection.

    "This may be a temporary change of color," Sabato writes, "but we have seen too many polls that are tied in North Dakota to ignore."

    How can that be? North Dakota has voted for every Republican presidential nominee but one since 1940.

    When it comes to North Dakota voting for a Democrat, let's just say I'm from Missouri.

    You know what that means, don't you?

    It means you're going to have to show me.

  18. Ohio (20): McCain 49%, Obama 47% — McCain has been endorsed by the Columbus Dispatch (which is not much of an accomplishment since the conservative Dispatch hasn't endorsed a Democrat since Woodrow Wilson in 1916).

    He also has the backing of the Cincinnati Enquirer, another Bush supporter from last time.

    Obama has been endorsed by several small Ohio newspapers, including three (the Canton Repository, the Hamilton Journal News and the New Philadelphia Times Reporter) that supported Bush four years ago.

    Obama also has been endorsed by the considerably larger Cleveland Plain Dealer, Dayton Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal and Toledo Blade.

  19. Oklahoma (7): McCain 61%, Obama 39% — I lived in Oklahoma for four years. And I have a really hard time imagining that it will vote for any Democrat for president.

    I lived there during an election (1992) that has to be regarded as the Republicans' low-water mark in the last 30 years — and, even with an independent on the ballot who captured nearly one-quarter of the vote, the Republicans beat the Democrats by more than 8 percentage points.

    In this election, The Oklahoman in Oklahoma City has endorsed McCain. It supported Bush in 2004 — and, based on my observations in the four years I lived in the state, I assume it has been endorsing Republican nominees for a long time.

  20. South Carolina (8): McCain 59%, Obama 41% — South Carolina has supported the Republican nominee in 10 of the last 11 elections. The sole exception was 1976, when Jimmy Carter carried the state.

    The State of Columbia endorsed McCain, just as it endorsed Bush in 2004.

  21. South Dakota (3): McCain 59%, Obama 40% — South Dakota has supported the Republican nominee in 10 consecutive elections.

    In fact, the only non-incumbent Democrats who have been even remotely competitive there were Dukakis (1988) and Carter (1976).

    I suppose there's a marginal case to be made for George McGovern, the state's senator when he ran against Richard Nixon in 1972. McGovern lost by less than 10 percentage points to Nixon in South Dakota. In most states that year, McGovern was losing by 20-30 percentage points.

    I know the polls have shown a tight race in South Dakota, but the last non-incumbent Democrat to carry the state was Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932.

    McCain has the support of the Sioux Falls Argus Leader — it endorsed Bush in 2004.

  22. Tennessee (11): McCain 56%, Obama 43% — Like Kerry four years ago, Obama has the support of the Nashville Tennessean and the Memphis Commercial Appeal.

    Tennessee has voted for the Democrat more frequently than most Southern states, supporting the Democrats when Al Gore was Bill Clinton's running mate in 1992 and 1996, when Jimmy Carter was the nominee in 1976 and when Lyndon Johnson ran against Barry Goldwater in 1964.

    But it was one of only three Southern states that voted for Nixon over John F. Kennedy in 1960, and it rejected Gore, its former senator, when he was the presidential nominee in 2000.

  23. Texas (34): McCain 60%, Obama 40% — McCain has been endorsed by quite a few Texas newspapers, including the Dallas Morning News, the San Antonio Express News and the Amarillo Globe-News — all of which endorsed Bush in 2004.

    McCain has also received the support of some newspapers that endorsed no one in 2004 — the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, the Beaumont Enterprise, the Tyler Morning Telegraph and the Times Record News of Wichita Falls.

    I don't know if the New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung endorsed anyone in 2004. But, in its endorsement on Sunday, the paper asserted, "Our support of McCain is tepid but it is representative of the more centrist position that probably aligns with the majority of our readers."

    And McCain was endorsed by one newspaper, the Corpus Christi Caller-Times, that endorsed Kerry in 2004.

    Obama, too, has received some endorsements in Texas. Noteworthy are the endorsements he received from the Houston Chronicle, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and the Austin American-Statesman, all of which supported Bush four years ago.

    Obama also has been endorsed by the tiny Lufkin Daily News (circulation 12,225), which supported Kerry in 2004, and the slightly larger Bryan/College Station Eagle, which endorsed no one in 2004. (It's worth noting that the Eagle also recommended, at about the same time, that voters re-elect a Republican senator and a conservative Democratic representative next week.)

    And, in the interest of fairness, I want to point out that the Waco Tribune-Herald, which endorsed Kerry in 2004, chose "after long, even painful, deliberation ... to side with neither Barack Obama nor John McCain."

    But the paper told its readers, "We recommend believing that our democratic process — however turbulent, however flawed — will reflect a collective wisdom of the electorate. The notion we seek to inject into the community discussion is this: Whoever wins, our country must unite behind the next leader because our challenges are too great for the rancor that now paralyzes us."

    Well said.

  24. Utah (5): McCain 69%, Obama 29% — Does this percentage for McCain seem wildly improbable to you? Utah gave 71% of its vote to Bush last time and it gave 67% of its vote to Bush in 2000.

    In fact, no Democrat in the last 40 years has received more than 37% of Utah's vote — most Democrats have received less than 30%.

    The Salt Lake Tribune, however, endorsed Obama. Four years ago, it endorsed the re-election of George W. Bush.

    Does that mean Utah will shift gears when the voters go to the polls and support a Democrat for the first time since 1964?

    Hmmmm ... Nope.

  25. Virginia (13): McCain 51%, Obama 48% — The current of clairvoyance has been tugging observers toward the conclusion that Obama will be the second Democrat to win Virginia since Truman carried the state in 1948.

    I've been resisting the undertow. But Virginia is one of the more fascinating stories that will unfold next Tuesday.

    I wrote about all this last week so I won't repeat most of it here.

    I think Virginia is experiencing a transformation, but I am not yet convinced that it is as sweeping as many people think.

    It certainly doesn't seem to be sweeping the state's newspapers.

    The Richmond Times-Dispatch and the Lynchburg News & Advance endorsed McCain's candidacy. Both supported Bush four years ago. And the Daily Press of Newport News and the weekly Rappahannock News Times both supported Kerry in 2004, but switched to McCain this time.

    The state will be under a microscope on Election Night. Yes, it will be close — but, as I pointed out last week, it's been close in Virginia before. And, since the days of Dwight Eisenhower, every Republican except Barry Goldwater has carried Virginia.

    I expect the streak to continue.

    By the way, if you live in Virginia, be aware that state officials anticipate a record voter turnout on Election Day. Considering that more than 70% of Virginia's voters participated in 2004, that suggests some pretty long lines. Plan your trip to the polls accordingly.

  26. West Virginia (5): McCain 54%, Obama 46% — Time was, non-incumbent Republicans didn't win West Virginia. For 70 years (from 1932 to 2000), the only Republicans to win West Virginia were incumbents seeking re-election.

    But the state seems to be undergoing a transformation.

    Actually, it may be a mistake to make it sound like an "in progress" phenomenon. George W. Bush wasn't an incumbent when he defeated Al Gore in West Virginia in 2000 — and, if the state had rejected Bush as it did 11 other non-incumbent Republicans since 1932, Gore would have become president. Even without the support of Florida.

    Democrats still win statewide offices in West Virginia, but the state hasn't shown much more inclination to embrace Obama than it showed for John Kerry or Al Gore. The state held its primary late in the spring, when Obama had all but wrapped up the nomination, yet West Virginia voted heavily for Hillary Clinton.

    Public opinion polls suggest the state could still wind up in the Democratic column, but McCain continues to lead in the surveys. It may take a more severe economic jolt in the final week of the campaign to flip West Virginia to the Democrats.

  27. Wyoming (3): McCain 65%, Obama 35% — Bush received 69% of Wyoming's vote both times.

I predict that Obama will win these states:
  1. California (55): Obama 54%, McCain 46% — A few large papers (the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Riverside Press-Enterprise and the San Francisco Examiner) along with some smaller papers (the Palm Springs Desert Sun, the North County Times and the Bakersfield Californian) have endorsed McCain, and he's also been recommended by the Napa Valley Register, which has a circulation of about 17,000. But Obama should win the state decisively.

    Given the state's voting pattern of the last 20 years, I would expect Obama to carry California, even without the endorsements of the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles Daily News, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Sacramento Bee, the Fresno Bee, the Contra Costa Times and the San Jose Mercury News.

    And Obama has also gained the endorsements of some smaller California papers that supported Bush in 2004 — for example, the Stockton Record and the Long Beach Press-Telegram. More than half a dozen California newspapers that endorsed Bush in 2004 have endorsed Obama.

  2. Colorado (9): Obama 50%, McCain 49% — Colorado may be a good test case for the question of how much influence is wielded by an endorsement.

    The Denver Post, which endorsed Bush in 2004, endorsed Obama in 2008. Will that help flip Colorado, which has voted Republican in nine of the last 10 presidential elections, from red to blue?

    Obama also has the support of the Aurora Sentinel, the Boulder Daily Camera, the Aspen Daily News and the Vail Daily. They all supported Kerry in 2004.

  3. Connecticut (7): Obama 52%, McCain 47% — Both the Hartford Courant and the New Haven Register supported Bush in 2004. They endorsed Obama in 2008.

  4. Delaware (3): Obama 54%, McCain 45% — Thanks to a clause in Delaware's election laws, Joe Biden — like Lyndon Johnson (in 1960), Lloyd Bentsen (in 1988) and Joe Lieberman (in 2000) — is simultaneously running for vice president and re-election to the Senate.

    Only Johnson won both races — but, at the very least, Biden does not appear likely to be the first to be denied re-election to the Senate.

    As a vote of confidence, Wilmington's News Journal gave its endorsement to Obama.

  5. D.C. (3): Obama 91%, McCain 9% — The Washington Examiner, a free daily tabloid, and the Washington Times endorsed McCain, but the heavyweight, the Washington Post, endorsed Obama.

    Blacks are in the majority in D.C., which has voted heavily for the Democrat in every election since first being allowed to vote for president in 1964.

  6. Hawaii (4): Obama 63%, McCain 37% — Having been born in Hawaii and having enjoyed a resounding victory over Hillary Clinton there in the state's caucuses, Obama appears to be positioned to carry Hawaii by perhaps the widest margin in its history on Election Day.

    The Honolulu Star-Bulletin endorsed Obama.

  7. Illinois (21): Obama 57%, McCain 43% — As an adult, Obama was sent to the Senate in 2004 by the voters of Illinois. About 70% of them voted for him over Alan Keyes, a long-time resident of Maryland who agreed to run against Obama. McCain will run stronger than Keyes did, but I've never given him much of a chance to win Illinois.

    Obama seems sure to be helped, in some quarters, by the endorsement of the Chicago Tribune, which gave its blessing to a Democratic presidential candidate for the first time in its 161-year history.

    It is also the largest newspaper in Chicago, triple the size of the more liberal Chicago Sun-Times, which also endorsed Obama.

  8. Iowa (7): Obama 51%, McCain 49% — Much has been made of the fact that the Iowa caucuses in January served as the launching pad for Obama's presidential ambitions. Due to the peculiarities of the rules governing caucus participation, not everyone who took part in the Iowa caucuses lived in Iowa.

    The involvement of young voters was deemed critical for Obama's success in Iowa. But you could participate in the caucuses if you were currently enrolled at a school in Iowa — even if you lived in a different state.

    So it's hard to tell how many of those voters will be voting in Iowa in November. Of course, it would be hard to predict how many of the younger voters will participate, anyway, since young people have historically been the least politically active demographic age group.

    The Des Moines Register endorsed Obama on Sunday. That came as no surprise, since the paper supported Kerry four years ago.

    And do you remember the character of "Radar" on "M*A*S*H"? Do you remember that Radar's hometown was Ottumwa, Iowa? Well, the newspaper in that town, the Ottumwa Courier, has endorsed Obama.

  9. Maine (4): Obama 54%, McCain 46% — Once a reliably Republican New England state, Maine has shifted to the Democrats as the Republicans have taken on more of a southwestern flavor in recent decades.

    The Lewiston Sun Journal supports McCain. It endorsed Bush in 2004. The Bangor Daily News has endorsed Obama. Kerry received its backing last time.

  10. Maryland (10): Obama 53%, McCain 47% — The only endorsement for McCain in Maryland thus far is from the Baltimore Examiner, a free tabloid with a daily circulation of 236,000. Its endorsement is the same as the one from the Washington Examiner, which isn't surprising since both are owned by the same company.

    The Baltimore Sun supports Obama. It supported Kerry in 2004.

  11. Massachusetts (12): Obama 55%, McCain 44% — I know anything can happen in an election, but does anyone seriously doubt that the only state that resisted Richard Nixon's bid for a second term in 1972 — and produced three Democratic presidential nominees in the last half century (as well as two more high-profile candidates who were not nominated) — will be in the Democratic column in November?

    Boston's largest newspaper, the Globe, endorsed Obama. But he shouldn't need the newspaper's assistance.

  12. Michigan (17): Obama 52%, McCain 47% — Not only does Obama have the support of the Detroit Free Press, but McCain has virtually conceded the state, withdrawing campaign funds to use them elsewhere.

    McCain does have the endorsement of the Detroit News. No Democrat has won the News' endorsement since it was founded in 1873 — but Republicans don't always win its support, either, as Bush discovered when it declined to recommend his re-election.

    McCain is also supported by the Grand Rapids Press, which endorsed Bush last time.

  13. Minnesota (10): Obama 51%, McCain 49% — Times are changing in the home state of Walter Mondale and Hubert Humphrey. Minnesota isn't as liberal as it once was, but it's not as conservative as the modern Republican Party would like it to be.

    No Republican has carried the state in the last 36 years. And Obama has received the endorsement of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

  14. Missouri (11): Obama 50%, McCain 49% — The two heavyweight newspapers in Missouri, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Kansas City Star, have endorsed Obama. They both endorsed Kerry in 2004, but the state voted for Bush, 53% to 46%.

    Obama also received the endorsement of the Columbia Daily Tribune, which endorsed Kerry last time.

  15. New Hampshire (4): Obama 51%, McCain 48% — The state is more competitive than you might expect. It was the only state that voted for Bush in 2000 that rejected his bid for re-election in 2004.

    Earlier polls showed McCain in front. Recent polls suggested a double-digit lead for Obama, but the margin has dropped into single digits in recent polls.

    I have resisted until only recently counting it as an Obama victory.

    McCain has received the endorsement of the Union Leader of Manchester, and Obama has been endorsed by the Nashua Telegraph and the Concord Monitor.

    None of those endorsements represent a shift in allegiance from the last presidential election.

    New Hampshire Republicans voted for McCain over George W. Bush in 2000, and their support in this year's primary gave McCain the boost he needed to revive his campaign for the GOP nomination. And Hillary Clinton revived her presidential campaign by beating Obama.

    But I'm going to predict that Obama will receive just enough votes to win New Hampshire and therefore sweep New England.

  16. New Jersey (15): Obama 53%, McCain 47% — The Asbury Park Press, the Bergen County Record and the Newark Star-Ledger all endorsed Obama, although he shouldn't need their help winning New Jersey.

  17. New Mexico (5): Obama 50%, McCain 49% — New Mexico is a small state, but it's a bellwether that both sides would like to win. McCain has been endorsed by the Roswell Daily Record (circulation 11,700). Obama has been endorsed by the Las Cruces Sun-News (circulation 24,735), which endorsed Bush in 2004.

    I'm inclined to think that the race to fill Pete Domenici's Senate seat is a better barometer. The Democrat, Tom Udall, has been leading in the polls by consistently wide margins, and I think that will help other Democrats on the ballot.

  18. New York (31): Obama 54%, McCain 45% — The New York Post endorsed McCain more than a month ago. The Jewish Press, a weekly in New York, supports McCain as well.

    The Jewish Press and the New York Post also endorsed Bush in 2004, as did the New York Daily News.

    But the Daily News has endorsed Obama this time.

    A few days ago, the New York Times added its name to the list of papers recommending Obama. No surprise there.

    Obama also has the support of the Buffalo News, which endorsed Kerry in 2004, and the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle and the Albany Times Union, neither of which endorsed anyone last time.

    And, while it represents a national readership in spite of its name (which, rightfully, implies an emphasis on culture in New York City), The New Yorker also has endorsed Obama. Although politically liberal, The New Yorker broke its eight-decade tradition of not endorsing presidential candidates in 2004 when it supported Kerry.

    I don't think endorsements will affect the outcome in New York. In recent (and even not-so-recent) memory, the state has seldom voted for the Republican ticket.

  19. Oregon (7): Obama 52%, McCain 47% — The Portland Oregonian has endorsed Obama.

    Only the presence on the ballot of a centrist Republican senator seeking re-election will keep Obama's share of the vote down in Oregon.

  20. Pennsylvania (21): Obama 51%, McCain 47% — Obama has the support of the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, all of which endorsed Kerry in 2004.

    But Obama also has been endorsed by the York Daily Record, the Erie Times-News and the 44,561-circulation Express-Times of Easton, Pa., all of which endorsed Bush four years ago.

    The Harrisburg Patriot-News endorsed no one last time, but it recommends Obama in 2008.

    It hasn't been completely one-sided in Pennsylvania, where McCain has made such an effort in recent weeks. The 100,000-circulation Philadelphia Bulletin has endorsed his candidacy. The Bulletin endorsed no one in 2004.

  21. Rhode Island (4): Obama 59%, McCain 41% — Rhode Island has supported the Republican nominee only twice in the last 12 presidential elections. In both cases, a Republican incumbent (Nixon in 1972, Reagan in 1984) was seeking re-election and wound up winning in a 49-state landslide.

    Nothing like that is going to happen this year.

    The Providence Journal has endorsed Obama. It supported Bush in 2004.

  22. Vermont (3): Obama 61%, McCain 39% — In previous generations, Vermont was a reliably Republican state. But it has voted Democratic in the last four presidential elections and should do so again.

    The Burlington Free Press has endorsed Obama; it endorsed Kerry four years ago.

  23. Washington (11): Obama 55%, McCain 45% — Many of the newspapers in Washington state — including both of Seattle's papers, the Seattle Times and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer — have endorsed Obama.

    The Democratic nominee also has been endorsed by the Tacoma News Tribune, the Tri-City Herald, The Olympian and the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin — all relatively small newspapers that endorsed Kerry in 2004.

    But Obama also has received the blessing of the Vancouver Columbian, which endorsed Bush last time.

  24. Wisconsin (10): Obama 49%, McCain 46% — The Wisconsin State Journal (circulation 138,276) endorsed Bush in 2004, but it supports Obama in 2008.

    Will that endorsement help Obama's cause? He also was endorsed by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a Kerry supporter last time.

    Wisconsin has voted for Democrats in the last five elections, but Gore and Kerry won narrowly there. In fact, the final outcome has frequently been close in Wisconsin.

When all the votes have been counted and all the winners and losers are known, it is my belief that America will still be a divided nation.

I think that what will change will be the nature of the identity of the most prominent division.

All the old divisions still exist, to a certain degree, and they will continue to exist after the election.

Some people will vote for or against Obama because of the color of his skin.

And some people will vote for or against McCain because of his age.

But I think that what will be clear from the results in the presidential election will be that voters in small, rural states tend to support Republicans and voters in large, metropolitan states tend to support Democrats.

It's been one of those rare elections when the Democrat has received more newspaper endorsements than the Republican — so far. We still have a week to go, and it's possible that the endorsements that will be published in the next seven days will overwhelmingly support McCain's candidacy.

But even if that is not the case (and I'm inclined to think that it won't be), it's clear that most of the metro newspapers support Obama. He also has received the endorsements of many small newspapers, but small newspapers clearly make up the bulk of McCain's constituency in the Fourth Estate.

Clearly, the only endorsements that matter are the ones expressed by every American voter in the polling places across the nation.

In my projection, McCain wins more states than Obama, 27-23. But two-thirds of McCain's states have less than 10 electoral votes apiece while half of Obama's states have at least 10 electoral votes — and many of them, like California, New York and Pennsylvania, have considerably more than 10.

Future campaigns may well be waged over the needs of small-town America vs. big-city America, perhaps leading to general public acceptance of modern versions of stereotypes that go beyond the basic elements of race, gender, age, religion or economic status.

If that's what awaits us in the future, the battle lines have been drawn in 2008.

And the bottom line in 2008 is ...

Obama — 284 electoral votes
McCain — 254 electoral votes


What's your prediction?

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Scouting the Landscape

More than two-thirds of the states permit people to vote early. In some states, people have already started casting their votes.

The process of actually choosing the next president, the next vice president, and the next Congress has begun and it will continue for the next four weeks.

I made my first prediction in the Obama-McCain campaign in June, just after Hillary Clinton had conceded and no one knew who the running mates would be in either party. At that time, I predicted McCain would receive 295 electoral votes and Obama would receive 243 electoral votes.

Just over a month ago, on Labor Day, I wrote a follow-up prediction that basically affirmed what I had predicted earlier — except that I moved the state of Michigan into the Democratic column. That made my prediction McCain 278 electoral votes, Obama 260 votes.

I'll stand by that one. From what I've been reading, McCain's campaign has given up on Michigan. Advertising dollars are being pulled out of Michigan and moved to areas where McCain's campaign believes they can be more efficiently spent.

Today — exactly four weeks before Election Day — I am prepared to amend my prediction a little more. It might change again before the election. It might even change tonight — depending on what each candidate says in the debate.

For quite awhile, I've heard that Colorado was too close to call. It's a state that has voted Republican in nine of the last 10 presidential elections. Until recently, I have believed it would continue to vote Republican. But lately I'm getting the impression the Democrats may be able to win there this time. I think it will be close. It's been close before. But I think the Democrats are positioned to win that state.

I've heard of other states — Ohio, Florida, Virginia, Missouri — that are considered too close to call. Some of the recent polls suggest that Obama has slim leads in those states. But I'm not convinced that any of them will vote for the Democrat. Not yet. Check back with me in the next four weeks.

Shifting Colorado to the Democrats' column leaves us with a 269-269 tie — assuming that all my predictions are correct and none of the congressional districts in Nebraska and Maine vote for someone other than the candidate who wins the state. If that happens — based on state laws — an elector could be required to vote against the wishes of the rest of the state.

Those representational laws haven't been factors before, but, in a close race, they could become extremely important.

For that matter, as far as I know, there are no laws that require electors to vote the way a state's residents vote on Election Day. The assumption is that a winner-take-all system exists in most states, but that is not binding.

That has given rise to what has become known as the "faithless elector," in which an elector votes for someone other than the person who actually carried the state.

In the past, faithless electors have been rare — and none have changed the outcome.

If the election results leave us with a tie on paper, there probably will be a lot of maneuvering and manipulating behind the scenes as both sides try to sway electors from the other side before they cast their votes in December.

And, if neither side is able to exceed 270 electoral votes, the decision will go to the House of Representatives. The Democrats hold the majority in the House today, and that majority is expected to increase in November.

But, if the House is called upon to decide the next president, each state receives one vote. A state that has one at-large representative will have just as much influence on the decision as the largest state — California — in which 53 representatives will decide who receives the state's vote.

That could set up some dramatic decisions in some states. For example, in my home state of Arkansas, three of the state's four members of the House are Democrats. But Republican McCain is expected to win by a wide margin there. How would the three Democrats vote if the decision becomes theirs to make? Will they honor the wishes of their state's voters, or will they support their party's nominee — especially if he seems to be the choice of voters nationwide?

To win in the House, a candidate must receive the support of a majority of the states.

In spite of what I hear being reported in the polls and what I see happening in the economy — and in spite of the fact that the war continues to be unpopular — I'm not persuaded (as some people seem to be) that enough people will break lifelong voting habits to give Obama a landslide victory.

I'm not even convinced that his lead is really as large as the polls suggest. Until the votes prove otherwise, I believe many people are telling pollsters they support Obama because it is considered the politically correct thing to say, but when they're alone in the voting booth, they will pull a different lever or mark a different box.

But the bad news continues to be heaped on the Republican Party. And the cumulative effect makes it increasingly difficult for demographic groups that have been supporting McCain to continue to do so.

The party in power takes the blame when things turn sour — even if the other party played a role. That's the way it is.

While we could debate almost endlessly each party's complicity in the financial crisis and the war, the Republicans bear the brunt of the blame because a Republican has occupied the Oval Office since 2001 and Republicans controlled the Congress from 1995 to 2007.

There are four weeks left in the campaign, with Obama and McCain scheduled to debate each other tonight and next Wednesday. A lot can happen. A month ago, the economy wasn't good, but it was better than it is today. Clearly, Republicans hope the bailout will make things look better four weeks from now.

If that happens, will that be enough to turn the tide?

Monday, September 1, 2008

A Slight Revision

Nearly three months ago, I made my first prediction on the ultimate outcome in the Electoral College between Barack Obama and John McCain.

It was a few days after the final presidential primaries had been held, and Hillary Clinton had conceded to Obama. For the first time in 2008, the Democrats had a presumptive presidential nominee.

At the time, I predicted that McCain would win 295 electoral votes and Obama would win 243.

It is traditional, on Labor Day, to make a prediction in a presidential race. That prediction is then revised periodically in the two months leading up to the election.

Well, I really only want to make one adjustment to my earlier prediction today — although there are a few states I plan to keep my eyes on for awhile.

Originally, I predicted that Michigan and its 17 electoral votes would go for McCain. But, today, I believe the state will vote for Obama.

That reduces McCain's margin in my scenario to 278 to 260.

A couple of states that I'm going to be watching are Colorado and New Hampshire, which are both predicted to be swing states. I still feel fairly confident that New Hampshire will vote for McCain, but I'm not sure about Colorado.

If Colorado, with its 9 electoral votes, supports Obama — and the rest of my prediction is correct — the electoral vote will be tied, 269-269.

And the decision will go to the House of Representatives.

Since the Democrats are expected to hold the majority in the House, that would mean that Obama would be likely to win. Right?

Well, not necessarily.

It's my understanding that, in this kind of proceeding, each state counts as one vote. Instead of relying on more than 400 individual votes to select the president, the emphasis would be on the 50 states.

In Texas, we have 30 congressional districts. But our House delegation would have only one vote in determining the president — the same as Illinois, which has 20 congressional districts, or, say, Delaware or Alaska, each of which has only one congressman.

In the House of Representatives, you must win a majority of the states to win the presidency.

There could be all sorts of situations going on.

For example, a state might vote for the nominee of Party A in the presidential race in November, but its congressional delegation has a one-seat margin favoring Party B. When the issue is brought to the House for a vote, will the state's House delegation respect the initial wishes of the voters? Or will it vote along party lines?

We could witness a frenzy of political lobbying that we've never seen before in this country.