Obama 293
McCain 245
Changes from Last Week
Obama to McCain: Nevada
McCain to Obama: New Hampshire
Swing in raw popular vote from last week: McCain +1.0
Swing in projected popular vote from last week: McCain +1.0
Projections based upon the current margin in the projected popular vote (50.7-48.3 Obama) combined with pundit predictions and state by state polling. Projection is intended as a possibility of the election's outcome if held today and not a final prediction
Current Projections
Safe Democratic (27)
D.C., Vermont, Illinois
Solid Democratic (68)
Rhode Island, Hawaii, New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Connecticut
Likely Democratic (105)
California, Maine, New Jersey, Washington, Delaware, Oregon, Minnesota
Leans Democratic (60)
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, New Mexico
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (33)
New Hampshire, Colorado, Ohio
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (5)
Nevada
Leans Republican (51)
Florida, Virginia, Missouri
Likely Republican (133)
North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Arkansas, West Virginia, Indiana, Louisiana, Georgia, Montana, Tennessee, South Dakota, Arizona, North Dakota
Solid Republican (37)
Mississippi, Alaska, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, Alabama
Safe Republican (19)
Wyoming, Idaho, Oklahoma, Utah
Based on State to State Polling Only
Obama 289
McCain 249
Bush to Obama: Colorado, Iowa, New Mexico, Ohio
Kerry to McCain: New Hampshire
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Daily Polling Update 5/22/08
Projected Popular Vote: Obama +4.8
Obama 51.9
McCain 47.1
Others 1.0
Raw Popular Vote: Obama +4.5
Obama 47.8 (47-49)
McCain 43.3 (40-46)
Tracking Polls Only
McCain 45
Obama 45
Raw Polling Data
Obama 47-44 (Gallup Tracking 5/17-5/21)
McCain 46-42 (Rasmussen Tracking 5/18-5/21)
Obama 48-40 (Reuters/Zogby 5/15-5/18)
Obama 48-37 (IBD/TIPP 5/12-5/18)
Obama 48-46 (Democracy Corps 5/13-5/15)
Obama 49-47 (Battleground 5/11-5/14)
Obama 47-40 (Quinnipiac 5/8-5/12)
Obama 51-44 (ABC/Washington Post 5/8-5/11)
Thrown Out Numbers
High: Obama 51, McCain 47
Low: Obama 42, McCain 37
Obama 51.9
McCain 47.1
Others 1.0
Raw Popular Vote: Obama +4.5
Obama 47.8 (47-49)
McCain 43.3 (40-46)
Tracking Polls Only
McCain 45
Obama 45
Raw Polling Data
Obama 47-44 (Gallup Tracking 5/17-5/21)
McCain 46-42 (Rasmussen Tracking 5/18-5/21)
Obama 48-40 (Reuters/Zogby 5/15-5/18)
Obama 48-37 (IBD/TIPP 5/12-5/18)
Obama 48-46 (Democracy Corps 5/13-5/15)
Obama 49-47 (Battleground 5/11-5/14)
Obama 47-40 (Quinnipiac 5/8-5/12)
Obama 51-44 (ABC/Washington Post 5/8-5/11)
Thrown Out Numbers
High: Obama 51, McCain 47
Low: Obama 42, McCain 37
Daily Presidential Polling Update 5/21/08
Sorry for not having done one of these daily updates in a long time, but the combination of a hard drive failure and a paucity of polling data threw up a temporary roadblock. Anyway, since looking over old election data from presidential campaigns in the past revealed that even in "two-way" races the various minor candidates still earn a single percentage point for their combined efforts. Therefore I've factored in this third party effect in the projected popular vote by setting aside 1% (sometimes .9% or 1.1% due to rounding) for spoiler candidates. For the time being this total includes both former Georgia Congressman Bob Barr, the likely Libertarian nominee, and Ralph Nader. If any third party candidate reaches three percent in the national averages I'll start including them separately, albeit with penalties factored in to compensate for the tendency of independent candidates to over-poll.
Also, I've decided that if there are five or less polls in the Real Clear Politics averages, I will simply use those numbers to determine the projected popular vote instead of throwing out the high and low numbers. However if there are six or more polls in the current database, I will continued removing those numbers.
Projected Popular Vote: Obama +4.6
Obama 51.8
McCain 47.2
Others 1.0
Raw Popular Vote: Obama +4.2
Obama 47.5 (47-48)
McCain 43.3 (40-45)
Tracking Polls Only
Obama 46
McCain 45
Raw Polling Data
Obama 48-40 (Reuters/Zogby 5/15-5/18)
Obama 47-44 (Gallup Tracking 5/16-5/20)
McCain 45-44 (Rasmussen Tracking 5/17-5/20)
Obama 48-46 (Democracy Corps 5/13-5/15)
Obama 47-40 (Quinnipiac 5/8-5/12)
Obama 51-44 (ABC/Washington Post 5/8-5/11)
Thrown Out Numbers
Obama: 51 (ABC/Washington Post), 44 (Rasmussen Tracking)
McCain: 46 (Democracy Corps), 40 (Reuters/Zogby)
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Kentucky/Oregon Live Blogging/Reporting
Kentucky Democratic Primary-100% Reporting
Clinton 459,145 65%
Obama 209,771 30%
Popular Vote Margin: Clinton +249,374
Oregon Democratic Primary-92% Reporting
Obama 344,410 59%
Clinton 242,266 41%
Projected Popular Vote Margin: Obama +111,000
Kentucky Democratic Primary Exit Polling
Clinton 65
Obama 29
Kentucky Democratic Primary Delegate Count
Clinton 37
Obama 14
Oregon Democratic Primary Projected Delegate Count
Obama 31 (29)
Clinton 21 (19)
6:29 PM: While the polls don't formally close in Kentucky until 7 PM EST, early numbers from counties in the eastern time zone appear to certify the large margin for Clinton, although Obama appears to be doing well in Lexington and will at least win a couple of counties which is more than he could say about West Virginia.
6:31 PM: The numbers have closed considerably in the last couple of minutes but Jefferson County, home of Louisville, and considered to be on of the few counties which Obama has even a small chance of carrying has reported about 30% of its results. In short, this is probably as close as Obama is going to get all night.
6:55 PM: While Obama is now within three points it appears that all of Jefferson county is reporting before the rest of the state. Still this bodes well for him reaching the 33-18 split which was considered Obama's best case scenario in Kentucky heading into tonight.
7:00 PM: MSNBC has called the Kentucky Democratic Primary for Hillary Clinton.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Democratic Primary Polling Update
Kentucky Democratic Primary
Clinton 59 (58.7)
Obama 30 (30.3)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Clinton 66
Obama 34
Projected Delegate Allocation
Clinton 34
Obama 17
Oregon Democratic Primary
Obama 53 (53.3)
Clinton 40 (40.3)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 57 (56.9)
Clinton 43 (43.1)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Obama 30
Clinton 22
Current Delegate Count + Projected 5/20 Totals (2,025 to win)
Obama 1917+47 1964
Clinton 1720+56 1776
Clinton 59 (58.7)
Obama 30 (30.3)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Clinton 66
Obama 34
Projected Delegate Allocation
Clinton 34
Obama 17
Oregon Democratic Primary
Obama 53 (53.3)
Clinton 40 (40.3)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 57 (56.9)
Clinton 43 (43.1)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Obama 30
Clinton 22
Current Delegate Count + Projected 5/20 Totals (2,025 to win)
Obama 1917+47 1964
Clinton 1720+56 1776
Current Delegate Count with Florida and Michigan + Projected (2,210 to win)
Obama 1996+47 2043
Clinton 1913+56 1969
Uncommitted 55
Obama vs McCain 5/18/08
Obama 294
McCain 244
Changes from last week
Obama to McCain: New Hampshire
McCain to Obama: None
Swing in raw popular vote from last week: McCain +.3
Swing in projected popular vote from last week: McCain +.2
Projections based upon the current margin in the projected popular vote (51.7-48.3 Obama) combined with pundit predictions and state by state polling. Projection is intended as a possibility of the election's outcome if held today and not a final prediction.
State by State Projection (Colored Bold indicates change from 2004)
Safe Democratic (27)
D.C., Vermont, Illinois
Solid Democratic (68)
Rhode Island, Hawaii, New York, Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts
Likely Democratic (105)
Maine, California, New Jersey, Washington, Delaware, Oregon, Minnesota
Leans Democratic (60)
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Iowa, New Mexico, Wisconsin
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (34)
Nevada, Ohio, Colorado
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (31)
New Hampshire, Florida
Leans Republican (24)
Virginia, Missouri
Likely Republican (139)
North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Arkansas, West Virginia, Indiana, Louisiana, Montana, Georgia, Tennessee, Arizona, South Dakota, Mississippi, North Dakota
Solid Republican (31)
Alaska, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, Alabama
Safe Republican (18)
Wyoming, Idaho, Oklahoma, Utah
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Senate Rankings 5/16/08
Senate (+4 DEM)
Current Senate: 51-49 DEM (GOP +1 with Presidential Victory, +2 with DEM Presidential Victory, needed for takeover)
Seats for Filibuster Proof Majority: +9 DEM or +11 GOP
Seats for Veto-Proof Majority: +16 DEM, mathematically impossible for GOP
Projected Senate: 55-45 DEM (+4 DEM)
Narrow Range: +5 DEM (56-44 DEM) to +3 DEM (54-46 DEM)
Medium Range: +6 DEM (57-43 DEM) to S.Q. (51-49 DEM)
Wide Range: +8 DEM (59-41 DEM) to S.Q. (51-49 DEM)
Possibility of Turnover: 1%
Republican Defenses
Likely Democratic
Virginia
Leans Democratic
New Mexico, New Hampshire
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up
Colorado
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up
Minnesota
Leans Republican
Oregon
Heavily Leans Republican
Alaska, Maine
Potentially Competitive
North Carolina, Texas, Mississippi (Special)
12 seats are currently safe
Democratic Defenses
Leans Democratic
Louisiana
11 seats are currently safe
Current Senate: 51-49 DEM (GOP +1 with Presidential Victory, +2 with DEM Presidential Victory, needed for takeover)
Seats for Filibuster Proof Majority: +9 DEM or +11 GOP
Seats for Veto-Proof Majority: +16 DEM, mathematically impossible for GOP
Projected Senate: 55-45 DEM (+4 DEM)
Narrow Range: +5 DEM (56-44 DEM) to +3 DEM (54-46 DEM)
Medium Range: +6 DEM (57-43 DEM) to S.Q. (51-49 DEM)
Wide Range: +8 DEM (59-41 DEM) to S.Q. (51-49 DEM)
Possibility of Turnover: 1%
Republican Defenses
Likely Democratic
Virginia
Leans Democratic
New Mexico, New Hampshire
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up
Colorado
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up
Minnesota
Leans Republican
Oregon
Heavily Leans Republican
Alaska, Maine
Potentially Competitive
North Carolina, Texas, Mississippi (Special)
12 seats are currently safe
Democratic Defenses
Leans Democratic
Louisiana
11 seats are currently safe
Friday, May 16, 2008
House Rankings 5/16/08
House (+7 DEM)
Current House: 235-199 DEM with 1 DEM vacancy (+19 GOP needed for takeover)
Seats Needed for a Veto-Proof Majority: +54 DEM or +91 GOP
Projected House: 243-192 DEM (+7 DEM)
Narrow Range: +12 DEM (248-187 DEM) to S.Q. (236-199 DEM)
Medium Range: +22 DEM (258-177 DEM) to +14 GOP (222-213 DEM)
Wide Range: +27 DEM (263-172 DEM) to +20 GOP (219-216 GOP)
Likelihood of Turnover: 5%
Current Vacancy
Democratic
Maryland 4th-Al Wynn Resigned (6/17/08-Safe DEM)
Changes from last update:
GOP Hold to DEM Gain: New York 13th, Minnesota 3rd, Ohio 15th
GOP Gain to DEM Hold: Texas 22nd
DEM Hold to GOP Gain: Mississippi 1st
Republican Defenses (199)
Heavily Leans Democratic (1)
Illinois 11th
Leans Democratic (3)
New Jersey 3rd, Virginia 11th, New York 25th
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (5)
New York 13th, Arizona 1st, New Mexico 1st, Minnesota 3rd, Ohio 15th
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (3)
Ohio 16th, New Jersey 7th, New York 26th
Leans Republican (10)
Washington 8th, Connecticut 4th, Alaska AL, North Carolina 8th, Illinois 10th, Michigan 7th, Louisiana 4th, Nevada 3rd, New York 29th, Ohio 1st
Heavily Leans Republican (5)
Michigan 9th, Missouri 6th, Colorado 4th, Pennsylvania 6th, Ohio 2nd
Likely Republican (5)
Florida 13th, Illinois 6th, Pennsylvania 18th, West Virginia 2nd, New Mexico 2nd
Potentially Competitive (13)
Florida 24th, Missouri 9th, California 4th, Virginia 2nd, Alabama 2nd, Florida 8th, Minnesota 6th, Illinois 18th, Pennsylvania 3rd, Florida 15th, Florida 21st, Nevada 2nd
Currently Safe (154)
Democratic Defenses (236)
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (2)
Alabama 5th, Mississippi 1st
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (2)
Texas 22nd, Kansas 2nd
Leans Democratic (11)
Louisiana 6th, Oregon 5th, Pennsylvania 10th, California 11th, Florida 16th, Georgia 8th, New Hampshire 1st, Arizona 5th, Wisconsin 8th, Pennsylvania 4th, New York 2oth
Heavily Leans Democratic (5)
Indiana 9th, Arizona 8th, Illinois 14th, Kentucky 3rd, Minnesota 1st
Likely Democratic (2)
Ohio 18th, Illinois 8th
Potentially Competitive (10)
Pennsylvania 8th, New York 19th, Texas 23rd, Kansas 3rd, Georgia 12th, Indiana 8th, New Hampshire 2nd, Pennsylvania 11th, Indiana 2nd, North Carolina 11th
Currently Safe (204)
Current House: 235-199 DEM with 1 DEM vacancy (+19 GOP needed for takeover)
Seats Needed for a Veto-Proof Majority: +54 DEM or +91 GOP
Projected House: 243-192 DEM (+7 DEM)
Narrow Range: +12 DEM (248-187 DEM) to S.Q. (236-199 DEM)
Medium Range: +22 DEM (258-177 DEM) to +14 GOP (222-213 DEM)
Wide Range: +27 DEM (263-172 DEM) to +20 GOP (219-216 GOP)
Likelihood of Turnover: 5%
Current Vacancy
Democratic
Maryland 4th-Al Wynn Resigned (6/17/08-Safe DEM)
Changes from last update:
GOP Hold to DEM Gain: New York 13th, Minnesota 3rd, Ohio 15th
GOP Gain to DEM Hold: Texas 22nd
DEM Hold to GOP Gain: Mississippi 1st
Republican Defenses (199)
Heavily Leans Democratic (1)
Illinois 11th
Leans Democratic (3)
New Jersey 3rd, Virginia 11th, New York 25th
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (5)
New York 13th, Arizona 1st, New Mexico 1st, Minnesota 3rd, Ohio 15th
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (3)
Ohio 16th, New Jersey 7th, New York 26th
Leans Republican (10)
Washington 8th, Connecticut 4th, Alaska AL, North Carolina 8th, Illinois 10th, Michigan 7th, Louisiana 4th, Nevada 3rd, New York 29th, Ohio 1st
Heavily Leans Republican (5)
Michigan 9th, Missouri 6th, Colorado 4th, Pennsylvania 6th, Ohio 2nd
Likely Republican (5)
Florida 13th, Illinois 6th, Pennsylvania 18th, West Virginia 2nd, New Mexico 2nd
Potentially Competitive (13)
Florida 24th, Missouri 9th, California 4th, Virginia 2nd, Alabama 2nd, Florida 8th, Minnesota 6th, Illinois 18th, Pennsylvania 3rd, Florida 15th, Florida 21st, Nevada 2nd
Currently Safe (154)
Democratic Defenses (236)
Tilts Republican/Toss-Up (2)
Alabama 5th, Mississippi 1st
Tilts Democratic/Toss-Up (2)
Texas 22nd, Kansas 2nd
Leans Democratic (11)
Louisiana 6th, Oregon 5th, Pennsylvania 10th, California 11th, Florida 16th, Georgia 8th, New Hampshire 1st, Arizona 5th, Wisconsin 8th, Pennsylvania 4th, New York 2oth
Heavily Leans Democratic (5)
Indiana 9th, Arizona 8th, Illinois 14th, Kentucky 3rd, Minnesota 1st
Likely Democratic (2)
Ohio 18th, Illinois 8th
Potentially Competitive (10)
Pennsylvania 8th, New York 19th, Texas 23rd, Kansas 3rd, Georgia 12th, Indiana 8th, New Hampshire 2nd, Pennsylvania 11th, Indiana 2nd, North Carolina 11th
Currently Safe (204)
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
West Virginia Democratic Primary/Mississippi 1st Special Election
West Virginia Democratic Primary 100% Reporting
Mississippi 1st Special Election 100% Reporting (DEM GAIN)
Clinton 239,062 (67%)
Obama 91,652 (26%)
Popular Vote Margin: Clinton +147,410
Popular Vote Margin: Clinton +147,410
Mississippi 1st Special Election 100% Reporting (DEM GAIN)
Childers (D) 57,276 (53.7%)
Davis (R) 49,314 (46.3%)
West Virginia Exit Polls (Second Wave)
West Virginia Exit Polls (Second Wave)
Clinton 64 (64.2)
Obama 32 (31.8)
West Virginia Projected Delegate Breakdown
Clinton 20 (16)
Obama 8 (7)
10:14 PM:The AP and Clarion Ledger have called the Mississippi 1st for Childers.
10:05 PM: And the race narrows yet again, with Childers lead now down to 700 votes, however Desoto county is now fully reported, removing Davis's surest stronghold from the remaining calculation.
10:00 PM: Childers is starting to pull away as Davis now needs roughly 61% of the outstanding vote with Childers' base county still out. While I wouldn't call the race if I was manning any decision desks in Northern Mississippi, it's starting to look like I'll be wrong in my prediction.
9:50 PM: Childers has lead throughout the entire night but Davis has closed to within three points. The baselines from three weeks ago have not held firm tonights, with counties flipping from blue to red and vice versa. However, Childers base is still out while 27 out of DeSoto's 38 precincts have reported. Still far too close to call.
9:15 PM: DeSoto has started to report but only at a 3:1 clip for Davis compared to the 5:1 ratio earlier, also while roughly one third of DeSoto's votes are in, Prentiss (Childers' home county) is still out.
9:05 PM: Childers has jumped out to an early lead, but appears to be underperforming in Democratic leaning counties compared to three weeks ago. Also DeSoto county (Davis's base which went for him 5-1 in the first election) still has yet to report.
7:39 PM: As expected MSNBC called the West Virginia Democratic Primary for Hillary Clinton as soon as the polls closed. The final margin is the real question, although I'm not particularly convinced that even a 90-10 victory would provide Hillary much of a lifeline. As for me, I'm going to focus the majority of my attention upon the Mississippi Special Election which I personally think tilts towards the Republican Greg Davis despite Travis Childers 49-46 win in the initial election back in April. Still, I'd rather be wrong than right in this case as a third straight Democratic special election victory in Republican tuft, this time in a double digit district with a top tier GOP candidate would be a positive auger heading into November.
10:05 PM: And the race narrows yet again, with Childers lead now down to 700 votes, however Desoto county is now fully reported, removing Davis's surest stronghold from the remaining calculation.
10:00 PM: Childers is starting to pull away as Davis now needs roughly 61% of the outstanding vote with Childers' base county still out. While I wouldn't call the race if I was manning any decision desks in Northern Mississippi, it's starting to look like I'll be wrong in my prediction.
9:50 PM: Childers has lead throughout the entire night but Davis has closed to within three points. The baselines from three weeks ago have not held firm tonights, with counties flipping from blue to red and vice versa. However, Childers base is still out while 27 out of DeSoto's 38 precincts have reported. Still far too close to call.
9:15 PM: DeSoto has started to report but only at a 3:1 clip for Davis compared to the 5:1 ratio earlier, also while roughly one third of DeSoto's votes are in, Prentiss (Childers' home county) is still out.
9:05 PM: Childers has jumped out to an early lead, but appears to be underperforming in Democratic leaning counties compared to three weeks ago. Also DeSoto county (Davis's base which went for him 5-1 in the first election) still has yet to report.
7:39 PM: As expected MSNBC called the West Virginia Democratic Primary for Hillary Clinton as soon as the polls closed. The final margin is the real question, although I'm not particularly convinced that even a 90-10 victory would provide Hillary much of a lifeline. As for me, I'm going to focus the majority of my attention upon the Mississippi Special Election which I personally think tilts towards the Republican Greg Davis despite Travis Childers 49-46 win in the initial election back in April. Still, I'd rather be wrong than right in this case as a third straight Democratic special election victory in Republican tuft, this time in a double digit district with a top tier GOP candidate would be a positive auger heading into November.
Daily Polling Update 5/13/08
Polling Data from 4/30-5/12
Obama 48 (47.5) (46-51)
McCain 43 (43.2) (40-46)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 Split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (52.3)
McCain 48 (47.7)
Tracking Polls Only
Obama 47
McCain 45
West Virginia Democratic Primary
Clinton 61 (61.3)
Obama 24 (24.3)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Clinton 72 (71.6)
Obama 28 (28.4)
Projected Delegate Count
Clinton 20
Obama 8
Monday, May 12, 2008
Daily Polling Update 5/12/08
As always the highest and lowest polling results for each candidate are thrown out in an attempt to reduce the influence of obvious outliers
Polling Data from 4/30-5/11
Raw Polling Numbers
Obama 48 (47.5) (46-51)
McCain 43 (43.0) (40-46)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 52 (52.5)(52.49)
McCain 48 (47.5)(47.51)
Tracking Polls
Obama 47 (47.0)
McCain 45 (44.5)
Polling Data
Obama 51-44 (ABC/Washington Post, 5/8-5/11)
Obama 47-43 (Gallup Tracking, 5/7-5/11)
Obama 47-46 (Rasmussen Tracking, 5/7-5/11)
Obama 46-40 (LA Times/Bloomberg, 5/1-5/8)
Obama 46-42 (AP/Ipsos, 4/30-5/4)
McCain 48-47 (USA Today/Gallup, 5/1-5/3)
Obama 51-40 (NYT/CBS, 5/1-5/3)
Obama 47-43 (Hotline/FD, 4/30-5/03)
Thrown Out
Obama 46 (LA Times), 51 (NYT/CBS)
McCain 40 (LA Times), 48 (USA Today/Gallup)
Phased Out
Obama 49-45 (CNN, 4/28-4/30)
McCain 46-43 (FOX, 4/28-4/29)
Polling Data from 4/30-5/11
Raw Polling Numbers
Obama 48 (47.5) (46-51)
McCain 43 (43.0) (40-46)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 52 (52.5)(52.49)
McCain 48 (47.5)(47.51)
Tracking Polls
Obama 47 (47.0)
McCain 45 (44.5)
Polling Data
Obama 51-44 (ABC/Washington Post, 5/8-5/11)
Obama 47-43 (Gallup Tracking, 5/7-5/11)
Obama 47-46 (Rasmussen Tracking, 5/7-5/11)
Obama 46-40 (LA Times/Bloomberg, 5/1-5/8)
Obama 46-42 (AP/Ipsos, 4/30-5/4)
McCain 48-47 (USA Today/Gallup, 5/1-5/3)
Obama 51-40 (NYT/CBS, 5/1-5/3)
Obama 47-43 (Hotline/FD, 4/30-5/03)
Thrown Out
Obama 46 (LA Times), 51 (NYT/CBS)
McCain 40 (LA Times), 48 (USA Today/Gallup)
Phased Out
Obama 49-45 (CNN, 4/28-4/30)
McCain 46-43 (FOX, 4/28-4/29)
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Presidential Preliminary Projection (5/11/08)
Obama 298
McCain 240
Changes from last week
McCain to Obama: Ohio, Nevada
Obama to McCain: None
Swing in raw popular vote from last week: Obama +3.1
Swing in projected popular vote from last week: Obama +3.4
Projections based upon the current margin in the projected popular vote (51.8-48.2 Obama) combined with pundit predictions and state by state polling. Projection is intended as a possibility of the election's outcome if held today and not a final prediction.
State by State Projections (Colored Bold indicates turnover from 2004)
Safe Democratic (31)
D.C. Vermont, Illinois, Rhode Island
Solid Democratic (134)
Hawai'i, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Connecticut, California
Likely Democratic (35)
Maine, Washington, Delaware, Oregon, Minnesota
Leans Democratic (60)
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, New Mexico
Tilts Democratic (38)
Colorado, New Hampshire, Ohio, Nevada
Tilts Republican (27)
Florida
Leans Republican (24)
Missouri, Virginia
Likely Republican (119)
South Carolina, North Carolina, Texas, Indiana, West Virginia, Louisiana, Arizona, Arkansas, Montana, Georgia, South Dakota
Solid Republican (51)
Mississippi, Tennessee, Alaska, North Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Alabama, Kentucky
Safe Republican (19)
Oklahoma, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah
Daily Polling Update 5/11/08
Sorry for the lack of an update yesterday, however I have included Saturday's numbers below for posterity. As always the highest and lowest polling results for each candidate are thrown out in an attempt to reduce the influence of obvious outliers.
Polling Data from 4/28-5/10
Obama 47 (47.0) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.7) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 Split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Daily Tracking Poll Average (Gallup and Rasmussen)
Obama 47
McCain 45
Polling Data from 4/28-5/09 (Saturday's Old Update)
Obama 47 (46.7) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.7) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largests Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.7)
McCain 48 (48.3)
Polling Data from 4/28-5/10
Obama 47 (47.0) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.7) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 Split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Daily Tracking Poll Average (Gallup and Rasmussen)
Obama 47
McCain 45
Polling Data from 4/28-5/09 (Saturday's Old Update)
Obama 47 (46.7) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.7) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largests Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.7)
McCain 48 (48.3)
Friday, May 9, 2008
Daily Polling Update 5/9/08
Polling Data from 4/28-5/8
Update:5/10/08 3:22 AM: As Real Clear Politics has fixed an error in their data reporting (a poll which first reported a 47-43 McCain advantage actually showed a 47-43 lead for Obama). As they have fixed their averages, so have I fixed mine.
As always the highest and lowest polling results for each candidate are thrown out in an attempt to reduce the influence of obvious outliers. (For example the CBS poll below showing an eleven point lead for Obama when every other poll shows a one to six point race).
Obama 47 (46.9) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.6 (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (Fox)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Update:5/10/08 3:22 AM: As Real Clear Politics has fixed an error in their data reporting (a poll which first reported a 47-43 McCain advantage actually showed a 47-43 lead for Obama). As they have fixed their averages, so have I fixed mine.
As always the highest and lowest polling results for each candidate are thrown out in an attempt to reduce the influence of obvious outliers. (For example the CBS poll below showing an eleven point lead for Obama when every other poll shows a one to six point race).
Obama 47 (46.9) (43-51)
McCain 44 (43.6 (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 7, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (Fox)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming a 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Daily Polling Update 5/8/08
Polls from 4/28-5/07
National Polling Data
Obama 47 (46.8) (43-51)
McCain 44 (44.4) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 5, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 51 (51.3)
McCain 49 (48.7)
West Virginia Democratic Primary
Clinton 60 (59.5)
Obama 25
Poll Leads: Clinton 2
Largest Lead: Clinton +40 (TSG)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 70
Obama 30
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Clinton 20
Obama 8
Kentucky Democratic Primary
Clinton 59
Obama 30 (29.5)
Poll Leads: Clinton 2
Largest Lead: Clinton +34 (SurveyUSA)
Projected Popular Vote (Assumed 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Clinton 67
Obama 33
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Clinton 34
Obama 17
Oregon Democratic Primary
Obama 51 (50.5)
Clinton 42 (41.5)
Poll Leads: Obama 2
Largest Lead: Obama +12 (Rasmussen)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 55
Clinton 45
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Obama 29
Clinton 23
National Polling Data
Obama 47 (46.8) (43-51)
McCain 44 (44.4) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 5, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 51 (51.3)
McCain 49 (48.7)
West Virginia Democratic Primary
Clinton 60 (59.5)
Obama 25
Poll Leads: Clinton 2
Largest Lead: Clinton +40 (TSG)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 70
Obama 30
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Clinton 20
Obama 8
Kentucky Democratic Primary
Clinton 59
Obama 30 (29.5)
Poll Leads: Clinton 2
Largest Lead: Clinton +34 (SurveyUSA)
Projected Popular Vote (Assumed 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Clinton 67
Obama 33
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Clinton 34
Obama 17
Oregon Democratic Primary
Obama 51 (50.5)
Clinton 42 (41.5)
Poll Leads: Obama 2
Largest Lead: Obama +12 (Rasmussen)
Projected Popular Vote (Assuming 50/50 split of undecided voters)
Obama 55
Clinton 45
Projected Delegate Breakdown
Obama 29
Clinton 23
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Daily National Polling Update 5/6/08
Polls from 4/28-5/06
Obama v. McCain
Obama 47 (46.6) (43-51)
McCain 44 (44.4) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 5, McCain 2
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (Fox)
Shift from 5/5/08: +.6 Obama
Projected Popular Vote (Presuming a 50/50 split in undecided voters)
Obama 51 (51.2)
McCain 49 (48.8)
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Indiana/North Carolina Results/Exits
Indiana Democratic Primary 99% Reporting
Clinton 644,590 (50.6%)
Obama 630,395 (49.4%)
Indiana Exit Polls
Clinton 52%
Obama 48%
Indiana Projected Delegate Count
Clinton 37 (37)
Obama 35 (33)
North Carolina Democratic Primary 99% Reporting
Obama 874,641 (56%)
Clinton 651,696 (42%)
North Carolina Exit Polls
Obama 55%
Clinton 41%
North Carolina Projected Delegate Count
Obama 66 (62)
Clinton 49 (46)
11:47 PM: Lake county has finally started reporting. With 26% in the margin is 75-25 Obama, if that gap holds up Obama will easily overturn Hillary's lead.
10:07 PM: It's fairly obvious that Obama has won the night and Hillary's momentum has been stunted, the only real question is whether or not it's via knockout or simply a unanimous decision by the metaphorical judges. In addition, Lake County (home to Gary and considered a major Obama stronghold as well as one of two counties still outstanding) will not start reporting until 11 PM. The question is if Lake will be able to overwhelm both her lead of around 42,000. Regardless the old Obama seemed to have returned during his victory speech and if tonight does de facto resolve the nomination, Hillary can blame her wonderful pandering over the gas tax holiday, which seems to have revived him while pushing Rev. Wright onto the back burner. BTW, since when did Harold Ford Jr. become an Obama supporter, or did I just falsely assume he was a Hillary supporter?
9:15 PM: MSNBC has moved Indiana from too early to call to too close to call as Obama is within 50,000 votes (53-47) within the Chicago Suburbs yet to report a single vote. Although since Obama has just conceeded Indiana during his victory speech in Raleigh it's possible he's looking at different numbers than I am.
8:04 PM: Still no call regarding Indiana presumably because the Chicago suburbs still haven't reported, although overcoming a 14 point lead won't be particularly easy for Obama regardless.
7:33 PM: MSNBC has called the North Carolina Democratic Primary for Barack Obama, doing so as soon as the polls closed. The first good sign in a long time for the Obama campaign. CNN has also called the race for Obama.
7:04 PM: Exiting Polling from Indiana show a four point lead for Hillary, assuming the polls are overstating Obama's support yet again, it's probably closer to a ten point lead, big enough that she'll get to claim a major victory but probably no more than a 40-32 or 41-31 delegate split.
6:39 PM: And due to Indiana being split between two time zones we actually have early numbers from the Hooiser State before exit polling numbers. Right now the vote tally looks good for Hillary but it's still extremely early with no numbers from NW Indiana or Indianapolis yet.
Clinton 644,590 (50.6%)
Obama 630,395 (49.4%)
Indiana Exit Polls
Clinton 52%
Obama 48%
Indiana Projected Delegate Count
Clinton 37 (37)
Obama 35 (33)
North Carolina Democratic Primary 99% Reporting
Obama 874,641 (56%)
Clinton 651,696 (42%)
North Carolina Exit Polls
Obama 55%
Clinton 41%
North Carolina Projected Delegate Count
Obama 66 (62)
Clinton 49 (46)
11:47 PM: Lake county has finally started reporting. With 26% in the margin is 75-25 Obama, if that gap holds up Obama will easily overturn Hillary's lead.
10:07 PM: It's fairly obvious that Obama has won the night and Hillary's momentum has been stunted, the only real question is whether or not it's via knockout or simply a unanimous decision by the metaphorical judges. In addition, Lake County (home to Gary and considered a major Obama stronghold as well as one of two counties still outstanding) will not start reporting until 11 PM. The question is if Lake will be able to overwhelm both her lead of around 42,000. Regardless the old Obama seemed to have returned during his victory speech and if tonight does de facto resolve the nomination, Hillary can blame her wonderful pandering over the gas tax holiday, which seems to have revived him while pushing Rev. Wright onto the back burner. BTW, since when did Harold Ford Jr. become an Obama supporter, or did I just falsely assume he was a Hillary supporter?
9:15 PM: MSNBC has moved Indiana from too early to call to too close to call as Obama is within 50,000 votes (53-47) within the Chicago Suburbs yet to report a single vote. Although since Obama has just conceeded Indiana during his victory speech in Raleigh it's possible he's looking at different numbers than I am.
8:04 PM: Still no call regarding Indiana presumably because the Chicago suburbs still haven't reported, although overcoming a 14 point lead won't be particularly easy for Obama regardless.
7:33 PM: MSNBC has called the North Carolina Democratic Primary for Barack Obama, doing so as soon as the polls closed. The first good sign in a long time for the Obama campaign. CNN has also called the race for Obama.
7:04 PM: Exiting Polling from Indiana show a four point lead for Hillary, assuming the polls are overstating Obama's support yet again, it's probably closer to a ten point lead, big enough that she'll get to claim a major victory but probably no more than a 40-32 or 41-31 delegate split.
6:39 PM: And due to Indiana being split between two time zones we actually have early numbers from the Hooiser State before exit polling numbers. Right now the vote tally looks good for Hillary but it's still extremely early with no numbers from NW Indiana or Indianapolis yet.
A couple of last minutes polls in Indiana and North Carolina have moved the numbers just enough to justify another post. My final prediction heading into tonight is that Clinton will win Indiana by six and Obama will win North Carolina by eight, a split decision which will continue the death march to Denver and oblivion. However seeing as my predictions have absolutely stunk so far this primary season (mainly because I've never been able to work out a good formula unlike with the various legislative races) I wouldn't be surprised if either one of the candidates manages to finally land the knock out blow. Also some new head to head numbers between the Democrats and McCain finally put both Dems in the lead albeit narrowly, so I've included that data as well. I should have a new projection map for Obama v. McCain up next Sunday night (as is my plan until September) with one for Clinton v. McCain perhaps forthcoming if I ever become convinced that there is still a chance she could win the nomination (which is not currently the case).
Indiana Democratic Primary
Clinton 49(49.3) (43-51)
Obama 44 (44.0) (42-46)
Poll Leads: Clinton 4, Obama 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (Survey USA), Obama +2 (Zogby)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 53 (52.8)
Obama 47 (47.2)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Clinton 38
Obama 34
North Carolina Democratic Primary
Obama 50 (50.0) (47-53)
Clinton 42 (42.4) (37-45)
Poll Leads: Obama 7
Largest Lead: Obama +14 (Zogby)
Smallest Lead: Obama +4 (Insider Advantage)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 54 (54.1)
Clinton 46 (45.9)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Obama 62
Clinton 53
National Polling
Obama v. McCain
Obama 46 (46.4) (43-51)
McCain 45 (44.8) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 3, McCain 3, Tied 1
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 51 (50.9)
McCain 49 (49.1)
Clinton v. McCain
Clinton 47 (47.0) (45-53)
McCain 44 (43.6) (41-49)
Poll Leads: Clinton 6, McCain 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (USA Today/Gallup)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Indiana Democratic Primary
Clinton 49(49.3) (43-51)
Obama 44 (44.0) (42-46)
Poll Leads: Clinton 4, Obama 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (Survey USA), Obama +2 (Zogby)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 53 (52.8)
Obama 47 (47.2)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Clinton 38
Obama 34
North Carolina Democratic Primary
Obama 50 (50.0) (47-53)
Clinton 42 (42.4) (37-45)
Poll Leads: Obama 7
Largest Lead: Obama +14 (Zogby)
Smallest Lead: Obama +4 (Insider Advantage)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 54 (54.1)
Clinton 46 (45.9)
Projected Delegate Allocation
Obama 62
Clinton 53
National Polling
Obama v. McCain
Obama 46 (46.4) (43-51)
McCain 45 (44.8) (40-48)
Poll Leads: Obama 3, McCain 3, Tied 1
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (FOX)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 51 (50.9)
McCain 49 (49.1)
Clinton v. McCain
Clinton 47 (47.0) (45-53)
McCain 44 (43.6) (41-49)
Poll Leads: Clinton 6, McCain 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (CBS/NYT), McCain +3 (USA Today/Gallup)
Projected Popular Vote (With 50/50 Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 52 (51.8)
McCain 48 (48.2)
Monday, May 5, 2008
Indiana/North Carolina Polling Update
While my party continues down the road to its eventual seppuku, here's the polling data from North Carolina and Indiana which indicate that this crap is going to drag out for another month. For the curious, the polling data is from Real Clear Politics, a conservative leaning site which posts new data slightly more frequently than its liberal equivalent Pollster.com. (Although there is still debate as to whether Pollster's graphing or RCP's simple averaging is more accurate). However, the one major difference between RCP and my numbers is that I throw out the highest and lowest polling "scores" for each candidate in an attempt to fully neutralize any outliers. I should be back tomorrow with more live blogging and perhaps angry vulgarity.
Indiana Democratic Primary Polling
Clinton 49(49.3)(42-54)
Obama 44(43.7)(42-46)
Poll Leads: Clinton 4, Obama 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (SurveyUSA), Obama +2 (Zogby)
Projected Popular Vote (Presuming Even Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 53 (53.0)
Obama 47 (47.0)
Rough Delegate Estimate
Clinton 38
Obama 34
North Carolina Democratic Primary
Obama 49 (49.4)(48-53)
Clinton 43(42.8)(40-45)
Poll Leads: Obama 7
Largest Lead: Obama +10 (Public Policy Polling)
Projected Popular Vote (Presuming Even Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 54 (53.6)
Clinton 46 (46.4)
Rough Delegate Estimate
Obama 62
Clinton 53
Indiana Democratic Primary Polling
Clinton 49(49.3)(42-54)
Obama 44(43.7)(42-46)
Poll Leads: Clinton 4, Obama 1
Largest Leads: Clinton +12 (SurveyUSA), Obama +2 (Zogby)
Projected Popular Vote (Presuming Even Split of Undecided Voters)
Clinton 53 (53.0)
Obama 47 (47.0)
Rough Delegate Estimate
Clinton 38
Obama 34
North Carolina Democratic Primary
Obama 49 (49.4)(48-53)
Clinton 43(42.8)(40-45)
Poll Leads: Obama 7
Largest Lead: Obama +10 (Public Policy Polling)
Projected Popular Vote (Presuming Even Split of Undecided Voters)
Obama 54 (53.6)
Clinton 46 (46.4)
Rough Delegate Estimate
Obama 62
Clinton 53
Presidential Preliminary Projection (Obama v. McCain)
Obama 273-McCain 265
National Popular Vote
Obama 46 (45.5) (42-51)
McCain 45 (45.3) (40-47)
Poll Leads: Obama 3, McCain 3
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +5 (Gallup)
State By State Projections (Bold indicates turnover)
Safe Democratic (6)
D.C., Vermont
Solid Democratic (89)
Illinois, Rhode Island, New York, Hawai'i, Massachusetts, Maryland, Connecticut
Likely Democratic (88)
California, Maine, Washington, New Jersey, Delaware
Leans Democratic (72)
Minnesota, Oregon, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa
Tilts Democratic (18)
New Mexico, Colorado, New Hampshire
Tilts Republican (53)
Ohio, Nevada, Florida
Leans Republican (24)
Virginia, Missouri
Likely Republican (97)
Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Indiana
Solid Republican (70)
Arizona, Georgia, Montana, Mississippi, South Dakota, Alaska, North Dakota, Kansas, Alabama, Kentucky, Nebraska
Safe Republican (19)
Oklahoma, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah
Projection Based Purely Upon State Polls
Obama 275
McCain 263
Switches From Formula Based Projection
McCain to Obama: Indiana
Obama to McCain: New Mexico, New Hampshire
All Data Accurate as of 5/5/08
National Popular Vote
Obama 46 (45.5) (42-51)
McCain 45 (45.3) (40-47)
Poll Leads: Obama 3, McCain 3
Largest Leads: Obama +11 (CBS/NYT), McCain +5 (Gallup)
State By State Projections (Bold indicates turnover)
Safe Democratic (6)
D.C., Vermont
Solid Democratic (89)
Illinois, Rhode Island, New York, Hawai'i, Massachusetts, Maryland, Connecticut
Likely Democratic (88)
California, Maine, Washington, New Jersey, Delaware
Leans Democratic (72)
Minnesota, Oregon, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa
Tilts Democratic (18)
New Mexico, Colorado, New Hampshire
Tilts Republican (53)
Ohio, Nevada, Florida
Leans Republican (24)
Virginia, Missouri
Likely Republican (97)
Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Indiana
Solid Republican (70)
Arizona, Georgia, Montana, Mississippi, South Dakota, Alaska, North Dakota, Kansas, Alabama, Kentucky, Nebraska
Safe Republican (19)
Oklahoma, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah
Projection Based Purely Upon State Polls
Obama 275
McCain 263
Switches From Formula Based Projection
McCain to Obama: Indiana
Obama to McCain: New Mexico, New Hampshire
All Data Accurate as of 5/5/08
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Louisiana Special Elections
Louisiana 6th 99% Reporting (DEM GAIN)
Cazayoux (D) 49,312 (49.2%)
Jenkins (R) 46,282 (46.2%)
Casey (I) 3,705 (3.7%)
Louisiana 1st 99% Reporting (GOP HOLD)
Scalise (R) 33,750 (75.2%)
Reed (D) 10,103 (22.5%)
10:50 PM: Well that was weird. The Louisiana SOS site didn't update at all for over thirty minutes and after finally doing so, showed that will 99% reporting Cazayoux has won the Louisiana 6th Special Election. While my 3% prediction ended up being more or less on the money, it was a rather odd night to be sure with a Jenkins lead throughout the night suddenly being overtaken at seemingly the last minute. Hell, I'm half-tempted not to call the race just in case it's a glitch. Cazayoux's win means that the new house breakdown is 234-199 DEM (with 1 DEM and 1 GOP open seats). I can't say that I'm not surprised that he pulled this race off, but I can't say that I'm not excited either. Now we'll see if Cazayoux can hold the seat in the general, as while I'll tentatively rate the 6th as Leans Democratic, I can see it moving one way or the other before election. Still, that's something the Democrats can worry about in a few months, right now it's time to celebrate a second special election victory with another opportunity looming ten days down the road.
10:19 PM: And as soon as I finished the last post, the latest update shows that Cazayoux has closed within 1500 votes. Also, formal declaration be dammed, I'm calling the Louisiana 1st for Scalise myself.
10:16 PM: Cazayoux appears to be rallying slightly but it might be a case of too little, too late, as the vast majority of outstanding votes are from Baton Rouge proper which is Jenkins hometown and was carried by President Bush in 2004. Scalise has obviously won in the 1st, I'm just waiting for a formal call to mark it red.
10:05 PM: Well, it's really starting to look like I (and Survey USA) were mistaken about the race in Louisiana 6th as while most of the reporting areas so far are from solidly GOP areas, the lead is starting to look a tad on the insurmountable side. Scalise has a massive, if unsurprisingly lead in the Louisiana 1st.
9:04 PM: The polls in Louisiana closed a few minutes ago. Numbers should start coming in shortly.
7:08 PM: While I'm not particularly convinced that anyone else even reads this blog, I figured I might as well live blog the results of today's two special House elections in Louisiana. While the 1st district is almost certain to remain in Republican hands barring a major upset, the 6th has proven surprisingly competitive and the Democrats stand a slightly better than even chance of winning a seat in deep red territory. Cazayoux is considered the slight favorite as seen in a Survey USA poll released earlier this week showing him with a nine point lead over Jenkins. While Cazayoux is out of the mainstream of the national Democratic Party, running as a social conservative with populist tendencies, even a Democrat who votes with his party only 35% of the time would be a major improvement over Jenkins. Who's probably best known for narrowly losing the 1996 Senate Race to Mary Landrieu and then spending the next six months claiming she cheated him out of his rightful position. Furthermore losing a second special election in a three month time span would damage Republican chance of retaking the house in November, as a Cazayoux victory would increase the margin needed for Speaker Boehner to eighteen seats. While special elections are almost always close regardless of the nature of the district (although there are obvious exceptions including tonight's other special election) a victory for the Democrats here combined with Foster's previous victory and the possibility of Travis Childers winning in an even more conservative district against a first tier candidate (unlike Jenkins or Oberweiss) would seem a bad sign for the GOP. Furthermore, tonight's special election provides a first glimpse into whether or not prohibitive Democratic front-runner Barack Obama will serve as a boost or an anchor for down ticket Democratic candidates in November. With both the NRCC and third party groups (foremost Freedom Watch) attacking Cazayoux for his ties to Obama while the Illinois Senator's Presidential Campaign has been raising funds for the Louisiana Democrat. Although Cazayoux has yet to state a preference in the Democratic Presidential Primary should he become a Superdelegate after tonight, and has made noise about voting against Pelosi for Speaker should he win in a full term. The district's conservative lean has made me wary of predicting a turnover in the past, but both my formula and my gut now believe that Cazayoux's mix of conservative and populist views are enough to overtake the perpetual candidate Jenkins and carry the seat for the Democrats.
Louisiana 1st
Incumbent: Vacant (Bobby Jindal-Elected Governor of Louisiana)
Candidates: St. Rep. Steve Scalise (R) vs. Glida Reed (D)
2006 Result: Jindal* (R) 88.1% Gereighty (D) 7.4%
District PVI: R+18
Polling: None Recent
Rating: Safe Republican
% Prediction: Scalise by 25+%
Louisiana 6th
Incumbent: Vacant (Richard Baker-Resigned)
Candidates: St. Rep. Don Cazayoux (D) vs. Woody Jenkins (R)
2006 Result: Baker* (R) 82.8% Fontanesi (L) 17.2%
District PVI: R+7
Polling: Cazayoux 50% Jenkins 41% (Survey USA 4/29/08)
Rating: Tilts Democratic
% Prediction: Cazayoux by 2-3%
Cazayoux (D) 49,312 (49.2%)
Jenkins (R) 46,282 (46.2%)
Casey (I) 3,705 (3.7%)
Louisiana 1st 99% Reporting (GOP HOLD)
Scalise (R) 33,750 (75.2%)
Reed (D) 10,103 (22.5%)
10:50 PM: Well that was weird. The Louisiana SOS site didn't update at all for over thirty minutes and after finally doing so, showed that will 99% reporting Cazayoux has won the Louisiana 6th Special Election. While my 3% prediction ended up being more or less on the money, it was a rather odd night to be sure with a Jenkins lead throughout the night suddenly being overtaken at seemingly the last minute. Hell, I'm half-tempted not to call the race just in case it's a glitch. Cazayoux's win means that the new house breakdown is 234-199 DEM (with 1 DEM and 1 GOP open seats). I can't say that I'm not surprised that he pulled this race off, but I can't say that I'm not excited either. Now we'll see if Cazayoux can hold the seat in the general, as while I'll tentatively rate the 6th as Leans Democratic, I can see it moving one way or the other before election. Still, that's something the Democrats can worry about in a few months, right now it's time to celebrate a second special election victory with another opportunity looming ten days down the road.
10:19 PM: And as soon as I finished the last post, the latest update shows that Cazayoux has closed within 1500 votes. Also, formal declaration be dammed, I'm calling the Louisiana 1st for Scalise myself.
10:16 PM: Cazayoux appears to be rallying slightly but it might be a case of too little, too late, as the vast majority of outstanding votes are from Baton Rouge proper which is Jenkins hometown and was carried by President Bush in 2004. Scalise has obviously won in the 1st, I'm just waiting for a formal call to mark it red.
10:05 PM: Well, it's really starting to look like I (and Survey USA) were mistaken about the race in Louisiana 6th as while most of the reporting areas so far are from solidly GOP areas, the lead is starting to look a tad on the insurmountable side. Scalise has a massive, if unsurprisingly lead in the Louisiana 1st.
9:04 PM: The polls in Louisiana closed a few minutes ago. Numbers should start coming in shortly.
7:08 PM: While I'm not particularly convinced that anyone else even reads this blog, I figured I might as well live blog the results of today's two special House elections in Louisiana. While the 1st district is almost certain to remain in Republican hands barring a major upset, the 6th has proven surprisingly competitive and the Democrats stand a slightly better than even chance of winning a seat in deep red territory. Cazayoux is considered the slight favorite as seen in a Survey USA poll released earlier this week showing him with a nine point lead over Jenkins. While Cazayoux is out of the mainstream of the national Democratic Party, running as a social conservative with populist tendencies, even a Democrat who votes with his party only 35% of the time would be a major improvement over Jenkins. Who's probably best known for narrowly losing the 1996 Senate Race to Mary Landrieu and then spending the next six months claiming she cheated him out of his rightful position. Furthermore losing a second special election in a three month time span would damage Republican chance of retaking the house in November, as a Cazayoux victory would increase the margin needed for Speaker Boehner to eighteen seats. While special elections are almost always close regardless of the nature of the district (although there are obvious exceptions including tonight's other special election) a victory for the Democrats here combined with Foster's previous victory and the possibility of Travis Childers winning in an even more conservative district against a first tier candidate (unlike Jenkins or Oberweiss) would seem a bad sign for the GOP. Furthermore, tonight's special election provides a first glimpse into whether or not prohibitive Democratic front-runner Barack Obama will serve as a boost or an anchor for down ticket Democratic candidates in November. With both the NRCC and third party groups (foremost Freedom Watch) attacking Cazayoux for his ties to Obama while the Illinois Senator's Presidential Campaign has been raising funds for the Louisiana Democrat. Although Cazayoux has yet to state a preference in the Democratic Presidential Primary should he become a Superdelegate after tonight, and has made noise about voting against Pelosi for Speaker should he win in a full term. The district's conservative lean has made me wary of predicting a turnover in the past, but both my formula and my gut now believe that Cazayoux's mix of conservative and populist views are enough to overtake the perpetual candidate Jenkins and carry the seat for the Democrats.
Louisiana 1st
Incumbent: Vacant (Bobby Jindal-Elected Governor of Louisiana)
Candidates: St. Rep. Steve Scalise (R) vs. Glida Reed (D)
2006 Result: Jindal* (R) 88.1% Gereighty (D) 7.4%
District PVI: R+18
Polling: None Recent
Rating: Safe Republican
% Prediction: Scalise by 25+%
Louisiana 6th
Incumbent: Vacant (Richard Baker-Resigned)
Candidates: St. Rep. Don Cazayoux (D) vs. Woody Jenkins (R)
2006 Result: Baker* (R) 82.8% Fontanesi (L) 17.2%
District PVI: R+7
Polling: Cazayoux 50% Jenkins 41% (Survey USA 4/29/08)
Rating: Tilts Democratic
% Prediction: Cazayoux by 2-3%
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