I don't quite believe that margin, but trying to suss it out makes my head explode. Democrats and Republicans both have huge-population states in their pockets (California and New York; Texas)...and rounding out the Top Four, Florida can go either way, as well as Ohio being a toss-up.States populated 5 million or less have a VERY strong edge toward going Republican, which is advantageous in electoral votes, but which contribute less to percentages of the nation's population. Because even the smallest state is GUARANTEED three electoral votes, that is also advantageous to Republicans...in some SMALL way. California has about 50 times as many people as Wyoming, for example, but less than 20 times as many electoral votes.
Agree with you. I don't buy into the margin. For the Democrats to win only 46 percent of the vote, while the Republicans get either 52 or 53 (leave at least a one-percent buffer for candidates outside the two parties), and win the Electoral College with 275 wouldn't actually play out. The percentage margin is too much.
Over the 2008 and 2012 election cycles, about 130 million votes were cast for president. This means every 1.3 million by which the U.S. Popular Vote is carried account for a full percentage point in margin. A win by six percentage points is 7.8 million votes. (In 2008, the Democratic pickup winner, Barack Obama, won the U.S. Popular Vote by approximately 9.5 million raw votes and a percentage points margin of 7.26.)
Using 2016 as an example, and say a Republican wins a pickup of the U.S. Popular Vote by 6 percentage points, in order to get there (from Mitt Romney's 2012 loss of 3.86 percentage points), there would be a national shift toward the 2016 Republican presidential nominee of nearly 10 percentage points. Using the average estimate (from 2008 and 2012) of about 130 million raw votes cast, that would be shift 13 million from 2012 Democratic to 2016 Republican.
Where does one think the shift of 13 million votes, in order for a Republican pickup of the U.S. Popular Vote (by about 7.8 million), are going to come from? They come from nearly every state in the nation.
In the 1980 Republican pickup year (Ronald Reagan having unseated incumbent Democratic president Jimmy Carter), every state except Vermont shifted Republican. In the 1992 Democratic pickup year (Bill Clinton having unseated incumbent Republican president George Bush), every state except Iowa shifted Democratic. In the 2000 Republican pickup year (George W. Bush, despite not having won the U.S. Popular Vote, over incumbent Democratic vice president Al Gore), every state except Maryland and non-state District of Columbia shifted Republican. In the 2008 Democratic pickup year (Barack Obama, in the open-seat election, over John McCain), 45 states (minus Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and West Virginia) shifted Democratic. (Ark. and La. were the only conspicuous GOP shifts. Okla., Tenn., and W.Va. moved only slightly.)
In the past, a margin of six percentage points didn't mean as many raw votes. Now, they do. And if one takes a look at all states with double-digit electoral votes, they rank from the No. 1 most-populous state, California (55 electoral votes), to the No. 21 most-populous state, Minnesota (10 electoral votes). Adding those 21 states' electoral votes, and you get 379 of the 538 electoral votes. (In the 2020s, it is likely that Colorado, the most-populous state with single-digit electoral votes, will likely move up to having 10 electoral votes. Right now, I won't count it.) So, a quick math exercise: 379 divided by 538 equals 70.44 percent. So, in other words, 70 percent of the voting electorate, nationwide, come from these Top 21 states. And the notion that a party could win the U.S. Popular Vote by six points nationwide but not get enough of these states, along with the ones which rank between Nos. 22 and 50, does not seem believable.
I don't think it is believable. In 2000 and 2004, George W. Bush carried the following Top 21 states (with current electoral votes counted): Texas (38), Florida (29), Ohio (18), Georgia (16), North Carolina (15), Virginia (13), Indiana (11), Arizona (11), Tennessee (11), and Missouri (10). Those were 172 electoral votes. Meaning, just 98 were needed. And Bush got them. But…
If a Republican is winning the U.S. Popular Vote by six percentage points, you have to look at every state in the nation to get an idea how they would likely carry. You might as well look at what their margins tend to be compared to the national picture. For example, in my home state, Michigan, the Democrats have carried it between 5 and 6 percentage points in every election since after the 1980s with exceptions of 1992 (when it flipped Democratic for Bill Clinton), when it was 2 points more Democratic, and 2008 (Obama's Democratic pickup year and a landslide in the state by D+16.44) when it was 9 points more Democratic than the nation. Six or seven points, nationwide, would be enough for a Republican to flip Michigan. And before Michigan would flip, so too would Pennsylvania. When Republicans win the presidency, Pennsylvania seems have Democratic strength in resisting Republicans (John Kerry lost in the popular vote by 2.46 but won Pa. by the same-level margin; meaning the state was about five points more Democratic than the nation). When Democrats win the presidency, Pennsylvania seems to give Democrats more moderate level support (in 2008, the state was 3 points more Democratic than the nation; in 2012, it was closer to 1.5). So, before Michigan would flip Pa. would deliver.
But it wouldn't stop with Michigan and Pennsylvania. Wisconsin, which was barely carried in 2000 (for Al Gore) and 2004 (for John Kerry), seems like it would fall before either Mich. or Pa. If you put together Mitt Romney's 2012 result of 24 states and 206 electoral votes; shifted the nation nearly 10 percentage points; gave the 2016 Republican nominee a pickup in the U.S. Popular Vote a margin in between six and seven percentage points … these three states would be in position to flip. Pennsylvania has 20 electoral votes. Michigan has 16. Wisconsin has 10. That's 46 electoral votes. And then there are the four states which seem to be today's best bellwether states. In alphabetical order: Colorado (9), Florida (29), Ohio (18), and Virginia (13). They combine for 69 electoral votes. Mitt Romney needed to flip all of them to reach a prevailing 270. (His score with those four, and nothing more, would have been 275). By the way: These states aren't the limit. There is also Iowa (6), Nevada (6), New Hampshire (4), New Mexico (5). And there is even the double-digit Minnesota (10) to consider. N.M. carried by 10 points in 2012. Minn. was closer to 8 points for carrying for President Obama. Iowa, Nevada, and New Hampshire—just like Colorado, Florida, Ohio, and Virginia—carried for President Obama by under 6 percentage points.
OFF TOPIC: MSNBC just showed a USA map showing Donald Trump's support across the United States. It's one of the strangest maps that I have ever seen...like somewhat weak in Indiana, nonexistent in Colorado's Western Slope and in Kansas( !), and intense in ALL of upstate New York???
I can't believe Kansas...maybe for some reason it wasn't polled?
EDIT: Donald Trump's home state is New York, so I guess the upstate New York thing makes some sense.
I did not see it. Lately, I've been avoiding the Comcast takeover of MSNBC. But, if this has to do with primaries…I wouldn't take it seriously. Things start to gel more after the early states—Iowa, New Hampshire, and Florida (to name three).