Take a look at the purple states on the map below -

Map by Johnnygunn
What do you see?
I see an explanation of the results of the past four presidential elections.
In both 1992 and 1996, Bill Clinton won 11 out of 12.
He didn't carry Florida in 1992, Colorado in 1996.
In 2000, Al Gore won only one of them - New Mexico.
In 2004, John Kerry won only one of them - New Hampshire.
These 12 states occupy the middle quintile of many different rank orders of the percentage of Democratic votes. What is a rank order? It's where you rank each state from most Democratic to least Democratic. The District of Columbia ranks first, usually followed by Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Utah ranks last, preceded by Wyoming and Idaho.
Rank orders are valuable in that you can track patterns across decades of elections even if there were landslides one way or the other. In 1984, only Minnesota and DC voted Democratic. Still, one can rank the level of Democratic support and see the electoral pattern of the 1990s unfolding.
Now, I admire Howard Dean for his Fifty State Strategy; however, if Massachusetts is close on election night we had better all pack our bags for Canada. Likewise, if Wyoming is close we can head down to the local bar after supper to celebrate. The keys in 2008, as they have been for the past two decades, are those 12 swing states.
Two state that went Dem three times are included in the twelve swing states - NH and NM. All eight states that went Dem twice are included - OH, WV, KY, TN, MO, AR, LA, and NV. Two states that went Dem once are included - FL and CO.
A note on methodology. I weighted the past four elections on a scale of 1 to 4 - with 1 going to 1992 results and 4 to 2004 results. The middle quintile should have only 11 states; however, I also included Kentucky. Even though Kentucky was below the middle quintile, it went Democratic twice. All other double-Dem states occupy the middle quintile.
Two states below the middle quintile have been trending increasingly Democratic - Virginia and Arizona. Virginia may be possible in 2008. We'll have to wait on Arizona until 2012. Two Democratic states are increasingly iffy - Iowa and Wisconsin. Kerry lost Iowa. Wisconsin has been a nailbiter. These states shouldn't be overlooked since they are essential to a Democratic victory in the electoral college.
What the 2008 election will come down to is whether or not the Democrats can win a sufficient number of these key states in order to win the electoral vote. If the Dems hold their core twenty states, then they really only need Florida or Ohio; yet, a message that appeals to all twelve is most likely to produce the winning results we all want.
PS -
What are the top ten?
DC, MA, RI, NY, VT, MD, HI, CT, IL, & CA
(That's why I discount polls that show McCain leading in Connecticut.)
And the bottom ten?
UT, ID, NE, WY, AK, ND, OK, KS, AL, & TX
|
|
|
Permalink :: 22 Comments :: Post a Comment
|
In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.
If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.