CoolBlue71
JUB Addict
I think so too. Nevada and New Mexico and Colorado went blue the last election. We have a lot of pwt in this state though.
Long response. (Hope you don't mind.)
Nevada and New Mexico are bellwethers. N.M. has had the vote since 1912, and has voted for all winners except 1976 Jimmy Carter (who narrowly missed it by 2.47% after 1972 Richard Nixon won it by 26.50%) and 2000 George W. Bush (who missed it by 366 votes and .006%). N.M. has gone for the winner of the popular vote in 24 of its 25 elections. It has agreed with Nev. in all but the election of 2000 (in which Bush won Nev. by 3.55%). Usually there isn't much difference in the margins between the two in how they vote. For example, Barack Obama carried them in landslides: Nev.: 12.49%; N.M.: 15.13%.
Historically Republican Colorado has been consistently one of the lower-tiered states in the GOP's column (in terms of margins from all states their candidates carry). In 2008, the Centennial State—along with Virginia—finally saw the raw-vote numbers not hold for the Republicans as Obama was able to win over counties that hadn't voted Democratic since 1964 Lyndon Johnson. In Colo., it was Arapahoe (Littleton), Jefferson (Golden), and Ouray (Ouray) counties. He shifted Colo. 13.62 points to win it by an impressive 8.95% (after 2004 Bush held it by 4.67%). In Colo. Obama was just one point shy of winning men (49%), and he won women by 15 points (56%).
You're right—this success for Democrats in southwest and mountain west states are very encouraging.
One other person responded, and I'm not familiar with the individual (no disrespect intended). He was dismissive of the possibility. Then again, pre-Election 2008 folks scoffed at the notion a Democrat could carry Virginia. (It was one of six states, of a total nine, that flipped from Republican to Democratic in which Obama won both the male and female vote.) And Indiana. And North Carolina. And an electoral vote in Nebraska.
On the subject of Arizona: In 2008, John McCain carried his home state by 195,004 votes [8.48%]. (2004 George W. Bush won Arizona by 210,770 votes and 10.47%.) In 2012, for Barack Obama to carry the state of Arizona he would have to flip, say, 100,000 of those votes to edge out whomever the Republicans nominate.
Obama would need to shift the counties more dramatically, particularly with a narrowing of the margins in Maricopa County (Phoenix), which (according to Wikipedia.org) has been "a Republican stronghold since 1948." (McCain carried it by 144,282 votes and 10.4%—2 points above state average.) The President would need to raise the margins substantially in "Democratic leaning" Pima County (Tucson). (Obama carried it by 23,848 votes and 6.0%.)
The last Democrat to carry Arizona was Bill Clinton in 1996. That was, of course, a re-election; but Clinton missed Ariz. in 1992 by only 1.95% (after 1988 George Bush won it by 21.21%), and he won it over four years later by 2.22%. (1996 Clinton missed Maricopa County by only 2.7%, and won Pima County by a landslide 12.8%.)
In 2008, Obama received 45% each of the male and female Ariz. vote. Now the percent of the male vote was impressive. If he had carried the female vote (as was the case in three of the 22 states in the column of McCain: bellwether Missouri, Montana, and Georgia), by, say, 55%, that would've delivered Obama the state of Arizona. So the female vote wasn't as strong I'd like to see; Obama did even better in South Carolina (48%; which John McCain carried by 8.98%) and Texas (47%; carried by McCain by 11.76%). Since these are the three longshot states I really want to see him flip, it would require [Obama] to essentially double his 2008 margin of victory in the U.S. Popular Vote, which was 7.26%, for re-election in 2012.
This is possible given where the current Republican Party is at; who their "contenders" are; their detachment from Americans' lives; and what they offer and represent. (Oh, and for the breakdown of the vote in 2008, which is the key motivating factor concerning Arizona's latest.)
This would be happening in the midst of a major landslide (winning the popular vote by at least 15%—and amassing, for the first time since the 1980s, beyond 400 electoral votes).
















