Scott Elliot runs a fantastic site for election junkies, Election Projection.com. His first projection of the 2012 race , matching Mitt Romney vs. Barack Obama, he projects the incumbent hanging on with 272 electoral votes; Romney wins 266. New Hampshire, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada and Wisconsin are among the swing states that stick with Obama; Romney wins Ohio, Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, Interestingly, he projects Romney to win 49.4 percent of the popular vote and Obama to win 49.1 percent of the vote.

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Thinking About the Electoral College Already…

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A new analysis by researchers at Tufts University confirms what many suspected: young people are less interested in the 2012 race than the 2008 race, and that the young voters who supported Barack Obama by wide margins last cycle are not, at this point, inclined to back the incumbent president by the same margin. A new, comparative analysis of current voter registration data in the key electoral states of Nevada and North Carolina shows a drastic drop from

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ContributorNetwork – COMMENTARY | Ann Coulter appeared on Fox News Channel’s “Hannity” Tuesday evening (Dec. 13) and attempted to explain why she now believes that Mitt Romney is the Republican Party’s only chance of defeating President Obama in the 2012 election. Although she dispensed with describing Sen. John McCain as a “douchebag” (a la MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”), she did have a moment while defending her reasonings for altering her opinion of Romney as a viable candidate to reinforce her ultra-conservative credentials by joking that she would vote for Jeffrey Dahmer over the incumbent president.

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Ann Coulter Says Romney Most Conservative Candidate — Does She Think Republicans Are Stupid?
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Daily Caller – President Barack Obama lost his first race for Congress in 2000, when the incumbent Rep. Bobby Rush turned back his primary grab for the Democratic nomination in Illinois’ First Congressional District.

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Video vault: In 2000, Bobby Rush schooled Barack Obama [VIDEO]
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Predicting 2012 the Nate Silver way

On November 5, 2011, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by Richard Riker

[Posted by Karl] That title might be unfair, depending on how you view it, as I’ll explain later. At the NYT, 538′s Nate Silver has set up a model  for calculating the odds of various GOP candidates winning the 2012 presidential election.  He wrote a long explanation for of the model the NYT magazine, and a short one for his blog.  Silver’s model relies on three basic factors: (1) Pres. Obama’s approval ratings a year in advance of the election; (2) GDP growth in 2012; and (3) the ideology of the eventual GOP nominee.  Let’s look at each factor in turn. Approval rating : Silver asserts that a “president’s approval rating toward the end of his third year *** has been a decent (although imperfect) predictor of his chances of victory,” presumably based on his prior research .  On the other hand, Gallup maintains that approval ratings at this juncture are not strongly predictive of an incumbent president’s re-election chances, and don’t become predictive until we move well into the election year .  Thus, while it would be nice to believe Silver’s findings on approval ratings because they suggest Obama’s odds would be less than one in three, I don’t really buy it.  Rather, I think Silver demonstrated the unremarkable theory that a sitting president near 50% has a good chance of reelection because not all the undecideds vote against the incumbent. The economy : Silver chooses GDP growth, so I’ll have to get a little wonky to explain his thinking.  Here’s Silver in the long explanation: Growth rates during an election year are a good but imperfect indicator of electoral performance. The two times that economic activity actually shrank during an election year, 1980 and 2008, the incumbent party lost badly. The two times that it grew by more than 6 percent, 1944 and 1972, it won overwhelmingly. But Eisenhower won a landslide in 1956 despite tepid 1.8 percent growth, and George W. Bush won in 2004 with only 2.9 percent. The economy grew about 5 percent in 1968, but that wasn’t enough to save Humphrey. Some political scientists have tried to explain these exceptions by resorting to an alphabet soup of economic indicators, conjuring obscure variables like R.D.P.I.P.C. (real disposable-personal-income per capita), which they claim can predict elections with remarkable accuracy. From the standpoint of responsible forecasting, this is a mistake. The government tracks literally 39,000 economic indicators each year. Although many (say, privately owned housing starts in Alabama) are obscure or redundant, perhaps two or three dozen of them are looked at regularly by economists. When you have this much data to sort through but only 17 elections since 1944 to test them upon, some indicators will perform superficially better based on chance alone, the statistical equivalent of the lucky monkey from a group of millions who banged out a few Shakespearean phrases on his typewriter. Conversely, indicators like the unemployment rate have historically had almost no correlation with election results despite their self-evident importance. The advantage of looking at G.D.P. is that it represents the broadest overall evaluation of economic activity in the United States. What’s going on in that passage is Silver’s criticism of the “Bread and Peace” forecasting model created by Douglas Hibbs — criticism that’s a bit overblown .  He’s rhetorically over-the-top in that passage because even his own criticism shows that disposable income growth is slightly more predictive than GDP growth.  Disposable income growth is not all that esoteric a concept; it’s essentially whether you’re finding more money in your pocket every payday as the election approaches.  Conversely, I could abbreviate Silver’s presumed variable as R.P.C.G.D.P.G.L.I.A. — real per capita GDP growth, less inflation, annualized — to make it sound more esoteric than it really is. (Also, if you look at the examples Silver cites as problematic, one might hypothesize that wars had something to do with them — a factor Hibbs accounts for, but Silver does not). GOP nominee ideology :  Silver thinks this factor may help Obama and it may the most, er interesting.  From Silver’s blog: I will have more detail on how the ideology scores are calculated in a subsequent article, but they are based on a combination of three statistical systems: (i) DW-Nominate scores for candidates like Mrs. Bachmann who have been in Congress; (ii) CFscores , developed by the political scientist Adam Bonica, which estimate a candidate’s ideology based on his fund-raising; and (iii) surveys, which have asked voters to assess the ideology of the candidates on a five-point spectrum from very liberal to very conservative. In the long explantion, Silver notes the “difference between Romney and Perry amounts to about 4 percentage points at the ballot booth.”  However, the general consensus among political scientists is that the difference between a moderate and conservative candidate is about 1% or 2%, not 4%.  It will also be interesting to see the guts of Silver’s relative rankings of the GOP nominees.  Romney, Cain and Perry have not been in Congress and thus do not have easily comparable DW-Nominate scores.  Looking at ranking by fundraising, I can show you a June 2011 measurement, based on data from prior campaigns, that shows — as Silver posits — that Perry is to the right of Cain.  But that chart also suggests Santorum is to the left of Romney and Mitch Daniels is to the right of Perry.  Or I could show you the October 2011 measurement , based on data for this cycle, that places Cain well to the right of Perry and just barely to the left of Bachmann — contra Silver’s assumption.  And Silver does not reveal his polling source, so it cannot be evaluated at this time.  Silver’s placement of Cain to the left of Perry seems to conveniently match the current poll positions of the NotRomneys, so I would await further explanation. Indeed, a larger criticism (for now) is that Silver, for all of the explanation in the NYT magazine in the blog, still leaves out details of how he ranked the GOPers and, more importantly, how each of the three factors are weighted.  I suppose a hacker could bust open the interactive app at the NYT site, but Silver is someone fond of demanding transparency of others while occasionally opaque himself .  In the past, he has eventually come around to transparency, so I would hope Silver is merely dragging out the reveal to provide more content for his blog.  Beyond that, it is disappointing that he chose to have his model predict odds of the various GOPers winning, rather than, say, a share of the two-party vote.  That would have allowed easier comparison with other competing models.  Given Silver’s approach, it will be easy for him to dismiss a GOP win, even by a more “extreme” candidate, not as a failure of his approach, but a simple case of a candidate “beating the odds.” –Karl

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Predicting 2012 the Nate Silver way

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Huey Long must be turning over in his grave. Qualifying closed today for Louisiana’s Fall 2011 statewide elections, and the once super-dominant Democratic Party has failed to field a single credible candidate for statewide office. Not a single one. Louisiana’s citizens have common sense. They understand that the policies favored by Washington Dems (on energy in particular) seem expressly designed to cripple Louisiana’s economy and kill Louisiana’s best jobs. They realize that there’s no real national role to play for a pro-life Democrat. Just recently, Democratic registration fell below 50% for the first time in, well, ever. Governor – Bobby Jindal will run against a field of nine opponents: four independents, four Democrats and one Libertarian. Two of the Dems are schoolteachers, and one of those is a self-described “Tea Party Democrat” who will try to outflank Jindal on the right. Other than Jindal, the Governor’s race features a field of political neophytes and perennial also-rans. None of the challengers currently holds elective office. John Georges, who finished #3 in the 2007 Governor’s race, has decided to take his $10 million & go home rather than run again. In other races: Lieutenant Governor – Incumbent Jay Dardenne (R, elected last year in a special election) will face the challenge of Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser (R), who garnered plenty of press coverage during last year’s BP oil spill. Dem Caroline Fayard declined to run for any office after mounting a well-funded effort against Dardenne in last year’s special election. Attorney General – Incumbent Buddy Caldwell (R, a recent party switcher) will be challenged by former U.S. Rep. Joseph Cao (R), who was defeated for reelection last November. Cao plans to make a case of Caldwell’s handling of the State’s claim against BP. Caldwell, you may remember, filed suit agasint Obamacare as a Democratic AG, while Cao was the sole House Republican to vote for Obamacare. State Treasurer – John Kennedy (R) will be unopposed. Secretary of State – John Schedler (R) drew a single opponent, House Speaker Jim Guy Tucker (R). Insurance Commissioner – Incumbent Jim Donelon (R) gained a last-minute opponent in Donald Hodge (D), a political newcomer. Commissioner of Agriculture and Forestry – Mike Strain (R) drew two opponents, a Reform Party candidate and a novice Democrat. U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu remains the only statewide elected Democrat. Rep. Cedric Richmond, the New Orleans freshman, is the only Dem in the House delegation. Defections have caused the power balances in both state legislatives bodies to flip to R. And the state’s most popular and recognizable Democratic politician is 80 year-old four-term Governor Edwin Edwards, recently released from Federal prison after serving eight years of a ten year sentence for racketeering. Cross-posted at stevemaley.com .

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The Democratic Wipeout in Louisiana is of Biblical Proportions

Again, it wouldn’t surprise me to see Obama have a fantastic fundraising quarter. He’s the incumbent, he has no Democrat primary opposition, he’s done a ton of fundraisers (often several per week) and his campaign is pulling out the stops. But tell me if you see a certain help-help-we-need-a-surge-to-avoid-bad-headlines tone to the latest message: Friend – If you’re planning on donating to this campaign at any point in the next 16 months, you should do it now. Tonight at midnight is not just your last chance to enter the “Dinner with Barack and Joe” contest, it’s also a hugely important fundraising deadline for this campaign — the first time we’ll report on our progress to the public and the press. The next few hours are critical for us. Please donate $5 or more today: https://donate.barackobama.com/Dinner Come next fall, people might not remember this date — or make the connection between the strength of our campaign then and the steps we took in these early months. But anyone worth their salt in politics knows tonight is one of the most important tests we’ll face as a campaign this year. Let’s hit it out of the park. Thanks,Messina Jim Messina Campaign Manager Obama for America Really? Obama needs a donation now as opposed to later this year or at any point in 2012? Tonight is one of the most important tests they’ll face this year? Call me crazy, but I think the most important tests will come in the first Friday of every month, when the new unemployment rate figures are announced…

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Obama’s Campaign Manager: Please Give Money Now, Now, Now!

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As a presidential candidate, Jon Huntsman won’t name names : Jon Huntsman

Over in the Corner , NR publisher Jack Fowler spotlights the Roger Sherman Liberty Center , a new outfit aiming to fight the good fight for free-market, limited-government principles in the politically rocky territory of Connecticut. In neighboring Rhode Island, a new poll reveals another reason for optimism for folks on the right: Congressman David Cicilline would lose to his Republican opponent by more than 10 points if an election were held today, according to an exclusive WPRI 12 poll that finds many voters are unhappy with the first-term Democrat. The new survey of 300 registered voters in Rhode Island’s 1st Congressional District shows Cicilline’s 2010 opponent, former state Rep. John Loughlin, would defeat him 47 percent to 35 percent, with 17 percent undecided. Another Republican, former State Police Col. Brendan Doherty, would beat Cicilline 46 percent to 33 percent, with 20 percent undecided, the poll reveals. All the traditional caveats apply — it’s early, it’s a small sample, it’s registered voters instead of likely voters (although generally Republican candidates do slightly better among likely voters), and with Obama at the top of the ticket, Rhode Island Democrats should come out in sizable numbers in 2012. But when 57 percent of respondents have a negative opinion of the incumbent, that incumbent has good reason to worry . . .

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GOP Leading Big in an Early Rhode Island House Poll?

It's not clear that this will end up having much of an impact on Election Day 2012, but Carolina Politics Online