Wednesday, March 21, 2012

If Obama's Virginia Poll lead Holds The Election Is Over Before It Starts.





According to the respected Quinnipiac opinion poll  
(AT THIS LINK) of how President Obama would fare in Virginia against all the current GOP candidates the president would win the state easily. President Obama led Romney   by 50-42 and Santorum by 49-40 with Gingrich and Paul having impossible odds against them.


Strikingly, even with Virginia governor Bob McDonnell on a Romney ticket as VP, which as advised earlier would be the GOP's best chance of winning the election given Virginia's key place in the electoral college calculations, the Romney/McDonnell ticket would still lose handily 50-43.


In the earlier analysis below, constructed before the Virginia poll result, I set out how difficult it will be for the GOP candidate to win in November. Map number four below shows that with the loss of Virginia,even if the Republicans win back all the other closely contested swing states they lost in 2008, Obama will still win. 


Whether, in the long view, this is a problem is a matter of discussion,especially for Palin supporters as set out in this analysis following on from Jeb Bush's endorsement of Romney. AT THIS LINK
*******************************************************************

Despite all the prognostications, hoopla, speeches, auguries and flim-flam artists meanderings, when all is said and done by about 9 p.m. on election day the election will have been decided.



Most likely when the exit polls and the first hours results are in from Florida the election result will be clear.The extra hour is required so the mistake the networks made declaring that Kerry had won Florida based on the exit polls would not be repeated.


If Florida goes for the President Obama there appears to be little, if any chance for the GOP to gain the 270 electoral college votes required to win as this map shows, and that is even allowing for Colorado/Ohio/Virginia/Iowa/Indiana/North Carolina to be won back. 


The only remote outside possibility for the GOP  might be if Santorum was the nominee and won Pennsylvania. Simply, if Florida is lost for the GOP then Republicans might as well turn off the TV around 9 p.m. as far as the presidential result is concerned. Obama could even lose New Mexico, Nevada and New Hampshire and still win

President Obama can win with Ohio even with the loss of Florida/Colorado/Virginia/Iowa/Indiana/North Carolina/Iowa/ and even volatile New Hampshire


President Obama can win with North Carolina even with the loss of Florida/Colorado/Virginia/Iowa/Indiana/Iowa/ and the one EC vote he gained in Nebraska 

The challenge for the GOP is such that even if they win Florida, just the loss of Virginia, which went strongly for Obama in 2008, will mean the election is over.

The challenge for the GOP is indeed striking, as can be seen by this map. Florida/North Carolina/Virginia/Ohio/Indiana have to be won back as well as either Colorado or Iowa



No comments:

Post a Comment