President Obama said yesterday on the stump in Roanoke Virginia, and quite correctly " When we get Virginia we will win this election." As the map below shows, yes indeed, Virginia is the key to the November election. If Obama carries it he can lose North Carolina, Florida and even Ohio, and still get to the 270 Electoral College votes required.
This
also goes to show how difficult Mitt Romney's battle in the Electoral
College is.Even if current polling gives Romney Florida he still loses 279-259 as per the map below.
Of
course anything can happen between now and November and if there
is a massive economic collapse President Obama might well
suffer the consequences as did John McCain in
2008. McCain had, because of Sarah Palin, actually passed Obama in
the polls, but once Lehman Brothers/Tarp and
McCain suspending his campaign eventuated nothing
Palin could do could save him.
But
barring an October surprise of such magnitude and the fact that
Virginia could determine who will be elected the election could well
be over, all bar the shouting, on August 24th. Virgil Goode,
the presidential candidate of the very conservative
Constitutional Party will be on the ballot in a number of states,
including,perhaps vitally, Ohio and Colorado. Obviously 1-2% of the
vote, taken from Romney, may make all the difference in
Ohio, which Obama won closely in 2008 but it is Virginia that
matters.
Goode
is from, and very popular in, down-state Virginia. Unfortunately for
Romney the conservative part of the state, and the key
to balancing Northern Virginia where Obama ran up
huge majorities which enabled him to defeat McCain in this previously
safe Republican state.
PPP
Polling has released its latest Virginia polling which
finds President Obama leading Romney by 8 points 50%-42%.
Naturally there will be ups and owns and the race may well tighten to
the 2% that Obama won it by in 2008 (or Romney might win it by that
margin) but if Virgil Goode gets 10,000 signatures and gets them from
the required places by August 24th, then this PPP polling result,
in italics below,
FROM
THIS LINK could be utter disaster for Romney;
"-If Virgil Goode gets on the ballot in Virginia it could spell trouble for Romney. He pulls 9% of the vote, getting most of his support from Republicans and conservative leaning independents. With him in the picture Obama's lead pushes out to 14 points at 49-35. It's highly unlikely Goode would get 9% in the end but he certainly could make a difference if Virginia ended up being more like a 1-2 pt race. Goode staying off the ballot may be vital to Romney's prospects there."
Of course, and as PPP rightly points out it is unlikely that Goode will get 9% even given that he is a local and well liked but if he takes even 2% which seems quite possibly given the possibility of a "Mormon Bradley effect" then Virginia would be lost on current polling and with it most likely the election for Romney. Everything between now and August 24th is chasing the wind politically, if Goode gets on the ballot on that date then the wind will be a hurricane in favor of President Obama.
Here is a local report (you can read the entire column)
AT
THIS LINK from the Richmond Times-Dispatch which the rest of
the media has chosen to ignore as if Goode gets on the ballot they
will have noting to write about as the campaign will be
over effectively-as Obama hinted yesterday.
With
a single vote — his own — Goode changed the course of the
Virginia Senate in 1996. He broke with fellow Democrats to impose
power-sharing on an evenly divided chamber. That ensured a
conservative coalition for a Republican governor named George Allen.
Sixteen
years later, Goode — now the far-right Constitution Party's nominee
for president — could change the
course of the Barack Obama-Mitt Romney contest in battleground
Virginia from tossup to Obama encore. Or could he?
A
new poll by Public Policy Polling, a Democratic outfit, has Goode
drawing likely Romney voters and taking 9 percent in Virginia. Such a
performance seems unlikely, not to mention the fact that Goode has
not yet qualified for the Virginia ballot.
In
2008, four independent candidates, combined with write-ins,
collectively pulled 1.02 percent of the Virginia vote. Consumer
advocate Ralph Nader led the pack with a whopping 0.30 percent.
The
last time an independent presidential candidate even moved into
significant single-digits was 1996. Billionaire Ross Perot got over 6
percent. Virginia — then less moderate than it is today — still
fell to Bob Dole.
Goode,
who's been a Democrat, an independent and a Republican, must first
navigate Virginia's ballot-access requirements, labeled by experts as
the toughest in the nation.
Goode
has until Aug. 24 to submit the signatures of 10,000 registered
voters, including 400 from each of the 11 congressional districts.
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