CoolBlue71
JUB Addict
So now the topic is topic is apparently the percentage of Native American Elizabeth Warren is and not the original post of she's leading in the polls against Scott Brown.
Poll Shows Elizabeth Warren Leading Massachusetts Senate Race
United States Senate special election in Massachusetts, 2010 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2010 U.S. SENATE (special): MASSACHUSETTS
✓ Scott Brown 1,168,178 51.83% (pickup; +107,317; R+4.76)
◊ Martha Coakley 1,060,861 47.07%
2010 U.S. SENATE (special): MASSACHUSETTS
✓ Scott Brown 1,168,178 51.83% (pickup; +107,317; R+4.76)
◊ Martha Coakley 1,060,861 47.07%
From the article: "Older voters and women also favor Warren by a wide margin…"
Four age groups: 18–29; 30–44; 45–64; and 65+. Way it tends to play is this: The youngest voting-age group is Democratic and the oldest group is Republican. The ones in between are most instrumental in deciding an election race. For the 2008 presidency, John McCain nationally won the oldest group while Barack Obama won the other three. In 2004, George W. Bush won the oldest group and the two in between while John Kerry carried the support of the youngest group.
If a Democrat were to win the oldest voting-age group … it would be one election race where the results (margin) will not be close.
As for women, fine, because Democrats win women first and then men. (Republicans do the opposite.) But if Elizabeth Warren unseats Scott Brown, and actually carries the oldest group, it's going to be hard to see how Brown could hang on with the male vote. (Unless we see exit polls, from Election Day, that deviate from the norm, particularly with the voting-age groups. The article says Brown leads with 30 to 49, but not by how much. And if she's leading 65+, or they may want to say 60+, then I don't believe the election vote would be a deviation.)
To unseat Brown, Warren will have to shift 53,659 raw votes (from that special election of 2010) in her direction. More than 3 million votes were cast in the state of Massachusetts for the U.S. presidential election of 2008. If Warren will be the next U.S. Senator from Mass., this will not be a problem.


























