MI-07: What To Watch For

It promises to be a tough Election Night for me and my Michigan 7th. If I had my way, I’d be sitting in front of the computer with a bag of popcorn from about noon until 3:00am. I really get into elections. And I’m ready to be done with the Mark Schauer versus Tim Walberg race. But sadly, I won’t be able to watch the beginning of the drama I’ve waited so long to see.

From 7:00pm to 9:00pm, I'm going to be away from a computer– and, in fact, away from any televisions, radios, or other devices which report election results. During arguably the most exciting portion of the night, when Virginia may be called for Obama, or when the returns start coming in for the Georgia Senate race, or when our own district begins reporting, I won't be able to be a part of it.

For a political junkie like me, that's like missing the World Series, the Rose Bowl (Go 'Cats! I believe in you!), and the World Cup all at once, which, by the way, are also on Christmas. Tomorrow could be a really amazing day, and I’m disappointed that I’ll be missing a big part of it.

But when I do get to a computer, I’ll be looking for a few things. I don’t claim to have a secret formula or know which tiny town will be the bellwether, and I’m definitely not a Grebner-like expert. But I can tell you what I think a Schauer victory might look like, and where I’ll be looking for it.

Turnout in Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson Counties

With 98 percent of Michigan’s voting population registered, there are a lot of people who could show up to vote. That’s got to worry Tim Walberg, whose victory in the 2006 GOP primary was thanks to what former Congressman Joe Schwarz called a “motivated minority” of 7.8 percent in a low-turnout primary. (Schwarz also called them “quasi-theocrats… infiltrating the party power structure”). Granted, a general election is very different from a primary, but a Walberg victory will depend on certain people not showing up, namely in Calhoun County, where Mark Schauer could run up the margin.

But Walberg has someone working against him: Barack Obama. The Obama campaign has done a phenomenal job of registering new voters who are trending Democratic. But they didn’t ask prospective voters for a partisan affiliation before they registered them, nor should they have. In a Republican-leaning district, is it possible that the Obama campaign might have just registered a bunch of new Republicans?

Maybe, but judging from where the new voters are coming from, probably not. With help from the Detroit Free Press (who got the data from the Michigan Secretary of State), here’s a fun table:

County Reg. Voters New Voters % Change (Jan. – Oct.)

Branch 31,805 683 +2%

Calhoun* 103,707 3,950 +4%

Eaton 80,023 2,781 +4%

Hillsdale 33,327 724 +2%

Jackson 115,357 4,672 +4%

Lenawee 71,552 2,170 +3%

Washtenaw* 273,955 24,962 +10%

Note that both Calhoun and Washtenaw Counties have portions not in the 7th District. This is especially important in Washtenaw County, where Ann Arbor (and the University of Michigan) probably accounts for most of the voters and most of the growth. However, Battle Creek, which is in the district, is the major population center for Calhoun County, and is probably responsible for most of that growth. So for our simplified purposes here, let’s ignore Washtenaw County but keep Calhoun County.

As you can see, the most new voters were added in Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson Counties (both in absolute number of voters and in proportion to their populations). Calhoun County is generally considered safe territory for Mark Schauer, who has represented the voters there in the state House and Senate since 1996 and is generally very popular. Jackson and Eaton Counties, meanwhile, are the major “battlegrounds.” Not only are they vote-rich, but they were divided pretty evenly in the 2006 election (Eaton: Renier 50 Walberg 48; Jackson: Walberg 51 Renier 46). Although Schauer currently represents much of Jackson County in the state Senate, I’m expecting it to be a major battleground again. Neglected in the voter registration drives were the Walberg strongholds of Branch and Hillsdale Counties, and to a lesser degree, Lenawee County (more on it in a minute).

I don’t have solid data behind me, but I’m going to guess that if they turn out to vote, the new voters in Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson Counties will break Democratic. If they were registered by the Obama folks, they were probably targeted as students or underrepresented populations, which is probably good news for Mark Schauer. At least, that’s what I’m hoping.

In 2006, Calhoun County had 47.5 percent turnout, Eaton County had 59.9 percent turnout, and Jackson County had 51.8 percent turnout (data here and here). If turnout is higher than that in those three counties (and especially Calhoun County), new voters and Schauer loyalists could run up enough of a margin to offset losses in the southern part of the district. If the turnout is really big in Calhoun County, that might be the whole ball game.

Is that a possibility? Could central-west Michigan see a massive surge in turnout? I don’t know, but it sounds like Kalamazoo County (one west from Calhoun County) is getting ready for one:

KALAMAZOO — Bracing for a very long and very busy Tuesday, area election officials say they're "as ready as we'll ever be" for the 2008 presidential election.

"We're in good shape," Kalamazoo County Clerk Tim Snow said. "We've been preparing for this all year. We knew this was going to be big."

A surge in voter registrations and predictions of a higher rate of participation means the county could have as many as 144,000 voters this year, compared to the 120,000 who cast ballots four years ago.

The city of Kalamazoo, in particular, has taken steps to avoid long lines Tuesday, putting in a minimum of 14 voting stations at each precinct and substantially increasing the staffing.  

[…]

On Tuesday, polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. People who are in line at 8 p.m. will be allowed to vote. The forecast calls for sunny skies and a high near 70 degrees.

 

Lenawee County

This is where Tim Walberg should win. He represented Lenawee County for 16 years in the state House of Representatives, and the mostly rural county is famous (or infamous) for its conservative politics and sometimes frightening tendencies. (Anyone else remember “Radio Free Lenawee”?) This is where I’m from, and I can say that it is a conservative place.

At the same time, though, people don’t really like Tim Walberg all that much. Oh, sure, some do. Whenever I was canvassing, I was bound to run into someone who would say, “I plan to vote for Tim, I’ve known him for years” or something like that. But I’d also meet someone who’d say, “Walberg? I can’t believe we keep electing that guy!” The solidly-Republican state House seat Walberg vacated has been in Democratic hands (albeit moderate ones) for ten years. With state Representative Dudley Spade basically guaranteed reelection, it’ll stay that way for at least two more years.

Meanwhile, the county is changing. Before the economy got really bad, a lot of people were moving out to Clinton or Tecumseh from Ann Arbor or metro Detroit for the cheaper properties, willing to put up with the couple-hour commute. They don’t have a relationship with Tim Walberg, and some of them are even (gasp) Democrats.

And the Schauer campaign has taken the county seriously, opening an office in downtown Adrian and hiring a full-time field organizer to staff it and coordinate with the Obama and Spade campaigns. Whenever he’s in the county, Mark Schauer is certain to mention his great relationship with Doug and Dudley Spade, both of whom carry a lot of weight. (Side note: Their secret to success? They’re actually really good representatives. If you go to Dudley Spade with a problem, he’ll do everything he can to solve it.) Throw in the Obama organizers, and you’ve got a real chance for 2008 to be a year of Democratic revival in Lenawee County.

Will Mark Schauer win it? … No. It just won’t happen. But he can keep it close. Governor Jennifer Granholm managed to take 47 percent of the vote in 2006, and if Schauer can get a similar share of the vote and hold Walberg to 51 or 52 percent, it could mean a lot. If Schauer opens up a big lead in Calhoun County and Washtenaw County, then there just aren’t enough voters in Branch and Hillsdale Counties to make up for it. Walberg needs to win Lenawee County convincingly. If Lenawee County is as tight as the other “battlegrounds,” it’s going to be a rough night for Tim Walberg.

And what if Mark Schauer wins Lenawee County? Then short of something really unexpected happening, Schauer will win the district. But like I said, Schauer won’t win Lenawee County. I’m not going to let my hopes get that high.

Obama

Barack Obama is going to win the state of Michigan. The only question left is “How big?” Since John McCain pulled out of Michigan, it’s started to look pretty big. Here’s the Pollster.com chart for Michigan:

That’s quite a sight, isn’t it? The final Pollster average puts it at Obama +16, which would be a bigger margin than Bill Clinton’s +13 win in 1996. That year, with the help of Ross Perot, Bill Clinton carried four of the counties that currently make up the 7th District: Calhoun, Washtenaw, Lenawee, and Branch. Calhoun and Washtenaw are to be expected, but Lenawee and Branch surprised me when I looked back at them. After all, these are supposed to be the conservative parts of the district.

Supposing Obama has similar success, picking up Calhoun, western Washtenaw, and at least one other county, is there any way Mark Schauer can lose? I’m not sure what the Obama-Walberg voter looks like, and I’d be shocked to see Obama carrying Jackson County by a wide margin but Schauer losing it. Maybe it’s possible, but Mark Schauer has done a good job presenting himself as a moderate and a hard-working, dependable public servant. If Obama wins big, I can’t imagine any reason for the Obama voter to choose “more of the same” and Tim Walberg.

*****

Upon re-reading all of that, I’m worried that I’m being too optimistic and tempting fate for another disappointing election night. It’s possible. Even so, and despite not having any idea of what I’m doing, I think that most of my reasoning has some foundation to it. I think one of the three factors above (if not all of them) could contribute to a Schauer victory.

That’s what I’ll be looking for, sometime around 9:15pm Eastern Time. It’s possible that there will be a clear leader by the time I arrive on the scene. We’ll see soon enough if any of this is right.

Cross-posted from Walberg Watch

What did voting for Obama mean to you?

Something I’ve found out throughout this election cycle is that as someone who was going to vote Democrat regardless of who it was, I really never processed the fact that we have chosen the first African-American as our nominee.  Obviously, it wasn’t something I didn’t notice at all, but it wasn’t something I had never truly processed because in the end, I didn’t need to, he had my vote from the get-go.  I dunno, it must be a good sign that something as significant as that was so easily forgotten by me.  

So when I got to go vote last Monday, I made sure to really stand there and evaluate the situation.  I stood there, filled in my Obama/Biden bubble and then just looked what I had done.  This is the next big step for the civil rights movement, and not just the African-American civil rights movement but civil rights movements in general.  What a huge step forward that for once, we are poised to elect someone who is not a white heterosexual male.  I didn’t stand there for too long reflecting on this but long enough to let it sink in, when Obama wins tomorrow (I’m not even bothering with alternatives, there aren’t any) this will start a completely new chapter for suppressed people in this country.

And as a homosexual, I am one of them.  My vote for Obama was a vote for the end of discrimination, to no longer allow the reins of power to constantly be in the hands of those who have always had them.  As someone who hopes to run for office some day, seeing a person of color come this far and most likely already have sealed the deal is profound to me.  While I certainly don’t think an Obama presidency will suddenly open the flood gates for minorities and women in this country to suddenly be office holders, it is one huge step in the right direction.  And that step not only furthers my future prospects, but America’s prospects.

The day when being a white heterosexual is no longer valued over other demographics in terms of success is hopefully coming to an end.  Obama’s candidacy is not the final nail in the coffin, it’s only one out of 100’s of nails that are needed but his is certainly the biggest.  And I hope some day that I get to have a nail in that coffin, and having Obama lead the way to this ultimate goal, well, he is one hella worthy person to follow.

What did voting for Obama mean to you?

Nov. 4, 2008 Poll Closing Times & Key Races

Please click the image for a larger version.

Below is a list of key House, Senate, gubernatorial and state legislative races, arranged by poll closing times. (Asterisks indicate open seats.) A list of key ballot measures can be found here. States with multiple closing times are listed in order of their earliest closing, with the exception of Oregon (where the bulk of the state is in the Pacific time zone). Once again, all times are Eastern, not local.


















































































































































































































































































































Time State Republican-Held Democratic-Held
6:00 PM
7:00 PM
Indiana (E.)
Indiana (W.)
IN-03, IN-04, IN-Gov IN-09, IN-House
6:00 PM
7:00 PM
Kentucky (E.)
Kentucky (W.)
KY-02*, KY-Sen KY-03
7:00 PM
8:00 PM
Florida (E.)
Florida (W.)
FL-08, FL-13, FL-18,
FL-21, FL-24, FL-25
FL-16
7:00 PM Georgia GA-Sen GA-08, GA-13
7:00 PM
8:00 PM
N.H. (Townships)
N.H. (Cities)
NH-Sen NH-01
7:00 PM South Carolina SC-01, SC-02, SC-Sen
7:00 PM Vermont VT-Gov
7:00 PM Virginia VA-02, VA-05, VA-10,
VA-11*, VA-Sen*
7:30 PM North Carolina NC-05, NC-08, NC-10, NC-Sen NC-Gov*
7:30 PM Ohio OH-01, OH-02, OH-03, OH-07*,
OH-15*, OH-16*, OH-House
7:30 PM West Virginia WV-02
8:00 PM Alabama AL-02*, AL-03 AL-05*
8:00 PM Connecticut CT-04 CT-05
8:00 PM Delaware DE-House
8:00 PM Illinois IL-06, IL-10, IL-11*,
IL-13, IL-18*
IL-14
8:00 PM
9:00 PM
Kansas (E.)
Kansas (W.)
KS-04 KS-02, KS-03
8:00 PM Maine ME-Sen ME-StateSen
8:00 PM Maryland MD-01*, MD-06
8:00 PM Massachusetts
8:00 PM
9:00 PM
Michigan (E.)
Michigan (W.)
MI-07, MI-09 MI-House
8:00 PM Mississippi MS-Sen MS-01
8:00 PM Missouri MO-06, MO-09*, MO-Gov*
8:00 PM New Jersey NJ-03*, NJ-04, NJ-05, NJ-07* NJ-Sen
8:00 PM
9:00 PM
N.D. (Most of E.)
N.D. (W. + some E.)
ND-StateSen
8:00 PM Oklahoma OK-01, OK-Sen OK-StateSen
8:00 PM Pennsylvania PA-03, PA-05*, PA-06,
PA-15, PA-18, PA-StateSen
PA-04, PA-08, PA-10,
PA-11, PA-12, PA-House
8:00 PM
9:00 PM
South Dakota (E.)
South Dakota (W.)
SD-StateSen
8:00 PM Tennessee TN-StateSen TN-House
8:00 PM
9:00 PM
Texas (E.)
Texas (W.)
TX-07, TX-10,
TX-House, TX-Sen
TX-22, TX-23
8:30 PM Arkansas
9:00 PM Arizona AZ-01*, AZ-03,
AZ-House, AZ-StateSen
AZ-05, AZ-08
9:00 PM Colorado CO-04, CO-06*, CO-Sen*
9:00 PM Louisiana LA-01, LA-04*, LA-07 LA-06, LA-Sen
9:00 PM Minnesota MN-02, MN-03*,
MN-06, MN-Sen
MN-01
9:00 PM Nebraska NE-02, NE-Sen*
9:00 PM New Mexico NM-01*, NM-02*, NM-Sen*
9:00 PM New York NY-13*, NY-25*, NY-26*,
NY-29, NY-StateSen
NY-20
9:00 PM Rhode Island
9:00 PM Wisconsin WI-Assembly WI-08, WI-StateSen
9:00 PM Wyoming WY-AL*
10:00 PM
11:00 PM
Idaho (S.)
Idaho (N.)
ID-01
10:00 PM Iowa IA-04, IA-05 IA-House
10:00 PM Montana MT-House MT-StateSen
10:00 PM Nevada NV-02, NV-03, NV-StateSen
10:00 PM Utah
11:00 PM California CA-04*, CA-26, CA-45,
CA-46, CA-50
CA-11
11:00 PM Hawaii
10:00 PM
11:00 PM
Oregon (E.)
Oregon (W.)
OR-Sen OR-05*, OR-House
11:00 PM Washington WA-08 WA-Gov
12:00 AM
1:00 AM
Alaska (E.)
Alaska (W.)
AK-AL, AK-House,
AK-Sen, AK-StateSen

Senate Races Analysis – Geography By State

Senator – Bob Schaffer (R) vs. Mark Udall (D)

Areas which Udall should carry include Alamosa, Aspen, Boulder, Denver, Durango, Gunnison, Pueblo, and Steamboat Springs.  Schaffer should carry Castle Rock, Colorado Springs, Greeley, and the Eastern Plains of Colorado.  Grand Junction should favor Schaffer, yet Fort Collins may likely go to Udall narrowly.

Outlook: Udall defeats Schaffer (Dem Gain)

Senator – Saxby Chambliss (R) vs. Jim Martin (D)

A late developing Senate race has placed Chambliss in an uncomfortable position.  Republicans have limited funds and the inability to make a last minute expenditure on his behalf, whereas the Democrats have sufficient funds to assist Martin.  Chambliss’s base is deserting him and moving toward Libertarian candidate Allen Buckley.  Two issues have alienated conservatives from Chambliss: support for the bailout vote and perceived softening on illegal immigration.  With half of the base deserted, Chambliss has to also overcome the Obama coattails which will benefit Martin.  Statewide African-Americans make up 29% of the electorate.  Women, a constituency favorable to Democrats, compose 52% of the electorate.  Other issues which have hurt Chambliss include an explosion at a sugar refinery near Savannah, high foreclosures in the Atlanta area, and the recent summer gas supply crisis.  Early returns should give a good idea as to whether or not Chambliss will survive.  Atlanta and its immediate counties are normally the last to report returns, yet its suburbs, territory considered favorable to Chambliss, are normally the first.  If Chambliss is under 60% in the counties north of Atlanta and those aligned with the Alabama border (north of Columbus), then the race will be called fairly quick.  

Key counties to look for:

Bibb, Chatham, and Thomas (both candidates should be performing less than 5% apart in these counties).

Barrow, Bartow, Carroll, Catoosa, Cobb, Coweta, Douglas, Effingham, Fayette, Glynn, Gwinnett, Habersham, Houston, Paulding, Spalding, Troup, Walker, and Whitfield  – Chambliss should be taking more than 58% of the vote in all of these counties.

Cherokee, Columbia, Dawson, Forsyth, Hall, and Walton – Chambliss should be taking more than 68% of the vote in all of these counties.

Strong counties for Martin will be: Clarke, Clayton, DeKalb, Dougherty, Fulton, Muscogee, and Richmond.  These geographic areas are Albany, Athens, Atlanta (city), Augusta, and Columbus.  

The Savannah area should be split with Chatham County favoring Martin and Effingham County favoring Chambliss.  The Macon area should also be split, with Bibb County favoring Martin, yet Houston County favoring Chambliss.  Counties to the south along the Florida border, including Valdosta, should favor Chambliss.  Counties to the north, including Rome, should also favor him.  If this scenario does not materialize, then Chambliss will not be re-elected.

Outlook: Martin defeats Chamliss (Dem Gain) or Chambliss fails to achieve 50%, forcing a runoff

Senator – Mitch McConnell (R) vs. Bruce Lunsford (D)

McConnell may have a war chest yet whether or not he can carry Kentucky remains to be seen.  Strong turnout from Jefferson County, which favors Obama, will require strong turnout in favor of McConnell from rural areas in order to offset McConnell’s disadvantage in Louisville.  Two areas of the state which McConnell cannot afford to lose are Eastern Kentucky (counties aligned with the West Virginia border) and Southwestern Kentucky (counties aligned with the Indiana border).  McConnell does indeed have problems however.  The areas he needs to carry have high rates of unemployment.  In addition, Obama’s message of change is bleeding over into Kentucky from media markets in Cincinnati and Evansville.  Obama may have a difficult task in carrying Kentucky, yet his message of change may convince voters that McConnell is part of their problems.

Key counties to look for on election night:

Boone, Campbell, and Kenton – These counties are closest to Cincinnati.  McConnell must perform strong here and cannot allow Lunsford to carry any of these three counties.

Fayette, Muhlenberg, Marion, and Franklin – These counties are largely spread out around the Lexington and Louisville metro area.  If Lunsford is performing ahead of McConnell in this area then McConnell is in serious jeopardy.

Breathitt, Elliott, Floyd, Knott, Magoffin, Morgan, Perry, Pike, and Wolfe – If these Eastern Kentucky counties turn favorable to Lunsford, then this race will be extremely close.

A repeat of the Bunning vs. Mongiardo race is in the making, yet expect a narrow loss for McConnell.

Outlook: Lunsford defeats McConnell (Dem Gain)

Senator – Norm Coleman (R) vs. Al Franken (D)

One of the most unusual races has been here.  Most of the campaign had been focused on the personality of Franken and devoid of the issues.  Now that the issues have taken center stage Franken’s numbers have approved.  Coleman is being hurt more by the placement of Independent Dean Barkley on the ballot than Franken is being affected.  A Libertarian and Conservative candidate only provide more avenues for disaffected Republicans.  Late breaking news regarding Coleman’s wife can only mean doom since the electorate never seemed impressed with either Coleman or Franken.

Key counties where Franken must perform strong:

Northern Tier (including Duluth) – Aitkin, Beltrami, Carlton, Cook, Itasca, Koochiching, Lake, Pine, and Saint Louis counties.  Amongst these nine counties are seven Indian Reservations, a constituency favorable to Democrats.  

Minneapolis/Saint Paul – Hennepin and Ramsey counties.

College towns – Blue Earth, Rice, and Winona counties.

Iowa and Dakotas border counties – Big Stone, Chippewa, Fillmore, Freeborn, Lac Qui Parle, Mahnomen, Mower, Norman, Swift, and Yellow Medicine.  These have been traditional Democratic areas.

Key counties where Coleman must perform strong:

Minneapolis/Saint Paul suburbs – Carver, Scott, Sherburne, and Wright counties.  These are higher income counties, yet also a mix of moderate and conservative Republicans.

Southwestern Minnesota – This is largely agricultural and moderate Republicans.

Central Minnesota – This includes cities such as Alexandria, Brainerd, Cambridge, Fergus Falls, and Saint Cloud.

Decisive Areas:

Saint Paul to Rochester – This includes Anoka, Dakota, Goodhue, Olmsted, Wabasha, and Washington counties.

North Dakota border counties – An area extending from the South and North Dakota border north to Fargo.

Whomever carries these two areas will most likely win the seat.

Initially Franken did not look promising, yet Coleman’s incumbency and Obama coattails appear sufficient enough to give Franken a narrow edge.

Outlook: Franken defeats Coleman (Dem Gain)

Senator – Roger Wicker (R) vs. Ronnie Musgrove (D)

Mississippi has the third highest unemployment rate in the nation (Rhode Island and Michigan are higher).  Statewide twenty-four counties have an unemployment rate over 10%.  The lowest unemployment rate in the state is Rankin County (suburban Jackson) at 4.9%.  A little more than one-third of the electorate here is African-American.  The unusual ballot has somewhat of a disadvantage for Musgrove.  The first Senate race lists the candidates and their party affiliation, yet the Wicker vs. Musgrove race does not identify the party for either candidate.  Since the state lists candidates alphabetically by last name (ex: Cochran first, followed by Fleming) some voters may see Musgrove listed first and assume he’s a Republican since Cochran is listed first under the Republican column for his race.  Should Democrats spend strongly in the final days and educate voters (as occurred in the race which made Childers victorious) then Musgrove has a chance in upsetting Wicker.

Musgrove must strongly carry the counties which he won in 2003: Adams, Benton, Bolivar, Chickasaw, Claiborne, Clay, Coahoma, Copiah, Hinds, Holmes, Humphreys, Issaquena, Jasper, Jefferson, Jefferson Davis, Kemper, Leflore, Marshall, Monroe, Noxubee, Panola, Pike, Prentiss, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tallahatchie, Tunica, Washington, Wilkinson, and Yalobusha.

Wicker should perform strong in the following counties: DeSoto, Lamar, and Rankin counties.

The victor will be whomever carries the votes from Biloxi, Columbus, Hattiesburg, and Tupelo.  Counties that Musgrove must target and perform competively include: Forrest, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lee, Lowndes, Newton, Oktibbeha, and Pearl River.

Part of the reason why Musgrove lost in 2004 is because he targeted African-American counties, yet largely ignored population centers, thereby winning the rural vote, but losing the more urban and suburban vote.  This year Musgrove must concentrate on population centers, particularly the Biloxi and Gulfport area.  However, while I hope for luck that Musgrove prevails, the confusion of the ballot may leave many Democrats who want Musgrove voting for Wicker.

Outlook: Wicker defeats Musgrove

Senator – Elizabeth Dole (R) vs. Kay Hagan (D)

Desperate Libby Dole, behind in the polls, decided that the best way to end her career was to air a scathing “Godless” ad against her opponent.  What Libby failed to realize is that early voting had already begun and a large number had already voted.  In addition, areas around Charlotte and Raleigh have a large number of Northeastern transplants, where God is not an election issue.  African-Americans, whom compose 22% of the electorate, are also unlikely to be motivated to vote against Hagan based on Dole’s ridiculous ad.  Originally Dole wanted to run on the social issue platform: illegal immigration.  However, when the economy tanked and newspapers statewide started questioning how much time Dole actually spent in the state, polling started to show Libby dropping fast.  

Areas where Hagan should perform strong:

Asheville (Bucombe, Haywood, and Jackson counties), Charlotte (Mecklenbury County), Eastern Coast (including cities of Goldsboro, Greenville, Kinston, New Bern, Rocky Mount, and Wilson), Fayetteville, Greensboro (Guilford County), Jacksonville (Duplin and Jones counties), and Raleigh-Durham.

Areas where Dole should perform strong:

Asheville (Avery, Henderson, and Mitchell counties), Charlotte (Union County), Greensboro/Winston-Salem, and Hickory.

Areas which will determine the winner:

Asheville (counties west of Buncombe), Asheville to Hickory (counties between Asheville and Hickory), Charlotte (Cabarrus, Gaston, Lincoln, Rowan, and Stanly counties), Craven County, Currituck County, Fayetteville to Raleigh (Harnett and Johnston counties), Iredell County, Surry County, and Wilmington to Jacksonville (Brunswick, Carteret, New Hanover, Onslow, and Pender counties).

Whoever is winning in the counties listed above will eventually be the winner.  Therefore, if returns show Hagan doing strong in Wilmington and suburban Charlotte, then expect a fast call against Dole.

Obama’s competiveness in the state, along with Dole’s failures, and massive turnout will spend the end of the North Carolina devil.

Outlook: Hagan defeats Dole (Dem Gain)

Senator – Gordon Smith (R) vs. Jeff Merkley (D)

A Republican falling into the arms of Obama is a rarity, yet Gordon Smith has been doing just that.  Oregon is considered a Democratic state and strong turnout from Multnomah County alone is enough to tilt the race against Smith.  State Represenative Jeff Merkley has been seeking to attach Smith with Merkley at every opportunity and it seems to be working.  Early vote turnout means more here than election day turnout and it appears that Merkley has accomplished the early vote turnout.  Here are areas to look for:

Areas favorable to Merkley:

Coastal – Clatsop, Columbia, Lincoln, and Tillamook counties.

Eugene/Coravlis – Benton and Lane counties.

Portland – Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, and Washington counties.

Areas favorable to Smith:

Southern Oregon (with the exception of Jackson County).

Western Oregon (with the exception of Jefferson, Deschutes, and Wasco counties).

The decisive areas will be:

Bend – Jefferson, Deschutes, and Wasco counties.

Medford – Jackson County.

Salem – Linn and Marion counties.

However, with strong Democratic turnout from Eugene and Portland, Democrats may have less of a necessity to rely on the decisive parts of the state.

Outlook: Merkley defeats Smith (Dem Gain)

Senator – Lindsey Graham (R) vs. Bob Conley (D)

Graham will likely lose Greenville County.  Greenville is the radical right wing part of the state and the only county which he lost in the primary.

Outlook: Graham defeats Conley

Senator – John Cornyn (R) vs. Rick Noriega (D)

Oilman John Cornyn is running for re-election against a backdrop of horrible financial news.  Normally he would be standing side by side with Bush, yet just not this year.  Cornyn is facing State Representative Rick Noriega.  The race will be close, yet just how close remains to be seen.  Here’s a breakdown:

Strong areas for Noriega:

Beaumont (Jefferson County), Bexar County (San Antonio), Dallas County, El Paso County, Harris County (Houston), Southern Texas (area extending from Val Verde County to Nueces County, major cities include Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Laredo, and McAllen), and Travis County (Austin).

Strong areas for Cornyn:

Montgomery County, Dallas/Fort Worth (includes counties of Denton, Ellis, Hood, Johnson, Kaufman, and Parker), North Texas (area north of Dallas, including cities of Sherman and Wichita Falls) and the Texas Panhandle (area extending from Oklahoma border to San Angelo – major cities include Abilene, Amarillo, Lubbock, Midland, Odessa, and San Angelo).

Decisive areas:

Beaumont-Port Arthur (all surrounding counties except Jefferson County), Central Texas (area between Austin and Dallas, including the cities of Killeen, Temple, and Waco), Coastal Texas (area between Corpus Christi and Houston, including cities of Galveston and Victoria).  Eastern Texas (includes cities of Longview, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, Texarkana, and Tyler), North Houston (includes cities of Bryan, College Station, and Huntsville), and Tarrant County (Fort Worth).

The decisive areas will offer a lot in terms of whether or not Cornyn actually prevails.  Eastern Texas has a large African-American population and turnout should benefit Noriega.  Central Texas, Coastal Texas, and North Houston have a growing Hispanic population and Tarrant County can deliver both African-American and Hispanic votes for Noriega.

While Noriega does have an outside chance of an upset it is a climb.  Cornyn has a massive war chest, yet Democrats may find themselves disappointed that they did not target Cornyn in less expensive markets here (Abilene, Amarillo, Beaumont, Corpus Christi, Victoria, Lubbock, Waco, and Wichita Falls).

Outlook: Cornyn defeats Noriega

Progressive Electorate Prediction Contest

We are having our first election projection contest. The deadline to enter is midnight on Monday November 3. However, I’m going to leave it open till when I get going in the morning for all you that are just seeing this. Please enter your predictions in the comments thread on The Progressive Electorate site only or email them to me at admin@progressiveelectorate.com.

The winner will receive a $25 Amazon Gift Card. 2nd place will receive a $10 Amazon Gift Card. 3rd place will receive a $5 Amazon Gift Card.

Here are the races

1. Missouri Presidential – Obama vs. MCain

2. North Carolina Senate – Hagan (D) vs. Dole (R)

3. Alabama 02 – Bobby Bright (D) vs Jay Love (R)

4. Obama over 45% in Texas – Yes or NO

5. Georgia Senate – Will there be a runoff yes or no?

6. New Mexico 02 – Harry Teague (D) Vs. Ed Tinsley)

7. Washington’s Gov’s Race Gregoire (D) vs. Rossi (R)

8. FLA 25 – Mario Diaz Balart (R) v Joe Garcia (D)

9. At least two Dem incumbents will lose: Yes or No

10. SC 01 – Henry Brown (R incumbent) vs. Linda Ketner (Democrat)

Bonus Question(a): State with largest Obama margin of victory (excluding D.C.)

Bonus Question(b): State with largest McCain margin of Victory

Tie breaker:  Dean Barkley’s percentage of the vote in Minnesota Senate Race

Rules

1. Submissions in the thread or by email to admin@progressiveelectorate.com

2. Submissions received no later than 12 midnight central time on Monday November 03

3. Highest total score wins – 16 total possible points

4. Tiebreaker will apply in case of tie

5. Each race or question valued at 1 point

6. Two bonus questions worth 3 points

7. Progressive Electorate is the official decider or democracy for this contest

Sample entry below

Sample Entry

1. Obama wins Missouri

2. Dole wins NC Senate

3. Bright wins AL-02

4. Obama yes over 45% in Texas

5. No Georgia Runoff

6. Teague wins NM-02

7. Gregoire wins

8   Garcia wins

9.  Yes two Dem incumbents lose

10. Brown wins

Bonus Question a – Illinois

Bonus Question B – Utah

Tie Breaker: Barkley gets 16%

Round up of top analyst predictions

thought I’d do a quick roundup of the top political analyst’s final predictions for the 2008 elections.  Feel free to add any I missed.

Charlie Cook

http://www.cookpolitical.com/

Pres: Obama 286EV McCain 139EV Tossup 113EV

House: Dem gain between 24-30 seats

Senate: Dem gain between 8-10 seats

Goov: No change to Dem gain of 1 seat

Larry Sabato

http://www.centerforpolitics.o…

Pres: Obama 364EV McCain 174EV

House: Dem gain of 26 seats

Senate: Dem gain between 7-8 seats

Gov: Dem gain of 1 seat

Stu Rothenberg

http://www.rothenbergpolitical…

Pres: Obama 353EV McCain 159EV Tossup 26EV

House: Dem gain between 27-33 seats

Senate: Dem gain between 7-9 seats

Gov: Dem gain of 1 seat to Rep gain of 1 seat

National Journal

http://www.nationaljournal.com…

House: Dem gain between 24-34 seats

Senate: Dem gain between 6-9 seats

Chris Cillizza

http://blog.washingtonpost.com…

Pres: Obama 319EV McCain 219EV

House: Dem gain between 25-30 seats

Senate: Dem gain of 8 seats

And for everyone’s amusement:

Karl Rove

http://www.rove.com/uploads/00…

Pres: Obama 338EV McCain 200EV

WA-Gov: Gregoire Pulls Ahead at Last Minute

SurveyUSA (10/30-11/2, likely voters, 10/26-27 in parentheses):

Chris Gregoire (D-inc): 52 (50)

Dino Rossi (R): 46 (48)

(MoE: ±3.9%)

Right after Strategic Vision joined in the party of everyone calling the Washington governor’s race a 50-48 race, along comes SurveyUSA throwing a pretty big curveball, one that shows a lot of last-minute movement to Gregoire.

As with the previous SUSA poll, Gregoire has a sizable edge with early voters, and in this poll, 72% of likely voters have in fact voted… and Gregoire leads by 8 among early voters. Rossi is tied among those who plan to vote at the polls, but that’s no path to victory.

Oddly enough, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer just had a story about how early voting seems to favor Rossi, as the heaviest rates of submissions of mail-in ballots are in red counties. However, their analysis has no way of knowing what’s actually on the ballots (there’s no party registration or Voting Rights Act recordkeeping in Washington)… and this poll, assuming it’s correct, would suggest that the red counties are going more for Gregoire than they did last time. That’s especially because the state’s two biggest blue counties, King and Pierce, are the only counties left that still use polling locations.

SurveyUSA also polled some downballot issues:

Attorney General: McKenna (R-inc) 59, Ladenburg 36

Superintendent of Public Instruction: Dorn (NP) 45, Bergeson (NP-inc) 37

Commissioner of Public Lands: Sutherland (R-inc) 48, Goldmark (D) 42

Initiative 985 (some Tim Eyman-sponsored crap about traffic): Yes (bad) 33, No (good) 45

Initiative 1000 (physician-assisted suicide): Yes 55, No 40

1974 Election – 52 Republican Seats GONE

In analyzing close races and a surge in Democratic registrations I’ve concluded that Democrats should pick up 52 seats tomorrow.  This is a repeat of the 1974 election in which Democrats picked up 48 seats.  These are the 52 seats I see switching over to Democrats.  Of these, two contests are so difficult to predict that the incumbents may actually survive (Shays and Reichert).  However, the rest are most likely headed for defeat.  States to watch on election night are FL, MI, NJ, NY, OH, PA, and VA.  Coincidentally, these are all in the Northeast (with the exception of Florida).  As the Republican Party turns more to the right the Northeast and Midwest are moving closer to the Democrats.  However, the down side is that the Northeast and Midwest are parts of the country expected to lose seats come 2012 (IA, MA, NY, OH, and PA).

As for state legislatures the battlegrounds are AZ, CO, IN, IA, ME, MI, MT, OH, OK, NY, PA, TN, and TX.  

The most intense battlegrounds are AZ, ME, MI, NY, OK, PA, and TX.

Democrats will pick up the following 52 seats:

AL 2 – Open Seat (Everett)

AL 5 – Open Seat (Cramer)

AK AL – Young

AZ 1 – Open Seat (Renzi)

AZ 3 – Shadegg

CA 3 – Lungren

CA 4 – Open Seat (Doolittle)

CO 4 – Musgrave

CT 4 – Shays

FL 8 – Keller

FL 21 – Lincoln Diaz-Balart

FL 24 – Feeney

FL 25 – Mario Diaz-Balart

ID 1 – Sali

IL 10 – Kirk

IL 11 – Open Seat (Weller)

IN 3 – Souder

KY 2 – Open Seat (Lewis)

MD 1 – Open Seat (Gilchrest)

MD 6 – Bartlett

MI 7 – Walberg

MI 8 – Rogers

MI 9 – Knollenberg

MN 3 – Open Seat (Ramstad)

MN 6 – Bachmann

NE 2 – Terry

NV 2 – Heller

NV 3 – Porter

NJ 3 – Open Seat (Saxton)

NJ 5 – Garrett

NJ 7 – Open Seat (Ferguson)

NM 1 – Open Seat (Wilson)

NM 2 – Open Seat (Pearce)

NY 13 – Open Seat (Fossella)

NY 25 – Open Seat (Walsh)

NY 26 – Open Seat (Reynolds)

NY 29 – Kuhl

NC 8 – Hayes

OH 1 – Chabot

OH 2- Schmidt

OH 15 – Open Seat (Pryce)

OH 16 – Open Seat (Regula)

PA 3 – English

PA 6 – Gerlach

PA 15 – Dent

SC 1 – Brown

TX 10 – McCaul

VA 2 – Drake

VA 5 – Goode

VA 11 – Open Seat (Davis)

WA 8 – Reichert

WV 2 – Capito

MS-Sen: More Wicker Dirty Tricks

I am not sure if this is a sign that Roger Wicker is in trouble, or he is just a little worried.  This story is classic.  

First, Wicker put up radio ads trying to turn black votes off of Ronnie Musgrove, now the GOP is sending out fake ballots insinuating that Wicker is running on the same ticket as Barack Obama and Bennie Thompson!  Check it out.

I still think Musgrove has a shot if he can up his white support, and Mississippi enjoys unprecedented black turnout.  I am going to be following this one closely tomorrow.

http://marcambinder.theatlanti…