Tuesday, December 21, 2010

2010 Census changes the House

As expected, the 2010 census has changed the dynamics of the House. 12 seats shifted in total, almost all seats went to republican states.

the breakdown

Gaining 4: Texas
Gaining 2: Florida
Gaining 1: Washington, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and South Carolina
Losing 1: Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Louisiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Massachusetts
Losing 2: New York and Ohio

the map:

Analysis to come later

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Swing State Project wins Again!

With the 2012 elections on everyone's mind, SSP has complied a list of the 10 GOP senators likely to be tea-bagged to death in 2012's primaries.

  1. Olympia Snowe - Maine
  2. Orrin Hatch - Utah
  3. Kay Bailey Hutchinson - Texas
  4. Richard Lugar - Indiana
  5. Bob Corker - Tennessee
  6. Scott Brown - Massachusetts
  7. John Ensign - Nevada
  8. Roger Wicker - Mississippi
  9. John Kyl - Arizona
  10. John Barrasso - Wyoming
If Olympia Snowe loses in Maine, moderate Republicans will seriously be endangered. She's one GOP senator I can stand. 

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Thanksgiving

Do you know what Thanksgiving means? It means Jordan goes on break for a while and it also means political stupidity is overshadowed by the crowds at Toys R Us in Times Square.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Who's running in 2012?

So far, none of the major Republicans have formally declared with the FEC, two Republicans have filed with the FEC. One from Montana and the other from California.

An interesting side note, the President has been shutting down all talk of 2012, but he will likley go unchallenged in the primaries, beginning in just over a year.

On the other side, numerous players have been speculated on. The list includes

  • Former Governor Sarah Palin - Alaska
  • Former Governor Mitt Romney - Massachussets
  • Governor Haley Barbour - Mississippi
  • Former UN Ambassador John Bolton - Maryland
  • Senator Scott Brown - Massachusetts
  • Former Governor Jeb Bush - Florida
  • Governor Chris Christie - New Jersey
  • Senator John Coryn - Texas
  • Governor Mitch Daniels - Indiana
  • Senator Jim DeMint - South Carolina
  • Former Speaker Newt Gingrich - Georgia
  • Former NYC Mayor Rudy Guiliani - New York
  • Former Governor Mike Huckabee - Arkansas
  • Governor Bobby Jindal Louisiana
  • Former Governor Gary E. Johnston - New Mexico
  • Governor Bob McDonnell - Virginia
  • Representative Ron Paul - Texas
  • Former Governor Tim Pawlenty - Minnesota
  • Representative Mike Pence - Indiana
  • Governor Rick Perry - Texas
  • Senator Marco Rubio - Florida
  • Former Senator Rick Santorum - Pennsylvania
  • Senator John Thune - South Dakota
  • Donald Trump - New York
Personally, I think the Republican primary will be a nasty race between Sarah Palin, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and Newt Gingrich, with a number of minor candidates. But the ultimate result, I think still leans towards President Obama. History has shown that incumbent Presidents are the hardest to defeat and if Obama can regain the energy of 2008, he will prevail. 

Thursday, November 4, 2010

A new commenting policy

To increase the usefulness of this blog, please feel free to add comments to the wide variety of posts. I recently discovered that commenting was disabled

:D

Senatorial Victory Margins

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Republican Casualty List

As expected, far smaller than the Democratic one
California

Open Seat, Governor

Delaware
Open Seat, At-Large District

Hawai’i
Open Seat, Governor
Representative Charles Djou

Louisiana
Representative Joseph Cao

Rhode Island
Open Seat, Governor

Vermont
Open Seat, Governor

Democratic Casualty List

This is a list of all Democratic losses last night, this will be updated as re-counts and challenges are filed

Alabama
Representative Bobby Bright

Arizona
Representative Ann Kirkpatrick
Representative Harry Mitchell

Arkansas
Open Seat, 1st District
Open Seat, 2nd District
Senator Blanche Lincoln

Colorado
Representative Betsy Markey
Representative John Salazar

Florida
Representative Alan Grayson
Representative Allen Boyd
Representative Ron Klein
Representative Suzanne Kosmas

Georgia
Representative Jim Marshall

Idaho
Representative Walt Minnick

Illinois
Open Seat, Senator
Representative Bill Foster
Representative Debbie Halvorson
Representative Phil Hare

Indiana
Open Seat, 9th District
Open Seat, Senator
Representative Baron Hill

Iowa
Governor Chet Culver

Kansas
Open Seat, 3rd District
Open Seat, Governor

Louisiana
Open Seat, 3rd District

Maryland
Representative Frank Kratovil

Maine
Open Seat, Governor

Michigan
Open Seat, 1st District
Open Seat, Governor
Representative Mark Schauer

Minnesota
Representative David Oberstar

Mississippi
Representative Travis Childers
Representative Gene Taylor

Missouri
Representative Ike Skelton

New Hampshire
Open Seat, 2nd District
Representative Carol Shea-Porter

New Jersey
Representative John Adler

New Mexico
Open Seat, Governor
Representative Harry Teague

New York
Open Seat, 29th District
Representative Michael McMahon
Representative John Hall
Representative Michael Arcuri

North Carolina
Representative Bob Etheridge

North Dakota
Open Seat, Senator
Representative Earl Pomeroy

Ohio
Governor Ted Strickland
Representative Charlie Wilson
Representative John Bocceri
Representative Mary Jo Kilroy
Representative Steve Derihaus
Representative Zack Space

Oklahoma
Open Seat, Governor

Nevada
Representative Dina Titus

Pennsylvania
Open Seat, 8th District
Open Seat, Governor
Open Seat, Senator
Representative Chris Carney
Representative Kathy Dahlkamper
Representative Paul Kanjorski

South Carolina
Representative John Spratt

South Dakota
Representative Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin

Tennessee
Open Seat, 6th District
Open Seat, 8th District
Open Seat, Governor
Representative Lincoln Davis

Texas
Representative Chet Edwards
Representative Ciro Rodriguez

Virginia
Representative Glenn Nye
Representative Rick Boucher
Representative Tom Periello

Washington
Open Seat, 3rd District

West Virginia
Open Seat, 1st District

Wisconsin
Open Seat, 7th District
Open Seat, Governor
Representative Steve Kagen
Senator Russ Feingold

Wyoming
Open Seat, Governor

still outstanding!

These districts wake up without Representatives:

  1. NY-29
  2. VA-11
  3. KY-6
  4. IL-8
  5. TX-27
  6. WA-2
  7. WA-9
  8. CA-11
  9. CA-20
  10. AZ-7
  11. AZ-8

These states wake up without Senators

  1. Alaska
  2. Colorado
  3. Washington
These states wake up without Governors
  1. Oregon
  2. Minnesota
  3. Illinois
  4. Connecticut
  5. Vermont
  6. Maine

Monday, November 1, 2010

Jordan's pre-election "rant"

Each of the following scenarios is a potential representation of what the country will wake up to on Wednesday morning. The numbers are entirely fictional; they are just there to give you an idea of what could happen if the conditions align

Scenario 1:

Imagine you're a commuter to New York. You board the train, find a seat and begin reading the New York Times. You read the headline: "Democrats Lose the House, Biden Steps in as Senate Tiebreaker". Across the country, Democrats are in shock. 84 seats in the House lost. Even 10 term Democrats are on the casualty list! Ike Skelton of Missouri, Sanford Bishop of Georgia, Frank Kratovil of Maryland and many others are named as the defeated. Even Barney Frank's race wasn't called until 2am.

The Democratic leadership is in turmoil. Chris Van Hollen, DCCC Chair, is rumored to be planning to step down. Senator Menendez of NJ is also rumored to step down as chair of the DSCC. Nancy Pelosi is preparing to serve out her last term in the House. Speculations abound as to who will be Minority Leader. On the other side, it’s a different story. John Boehner declares his intent to be Speaker along with a few others. Eric Cantor will assume Majority Leader in January.

The Senatorial story is no better. 8 seats have fallen. Recounts are underway in West Virginia and Colorado. Washington hasn't finished reporting its results though Patty Murray is behind by 15,000 votes. Harry Reid (NV), Russ Feingold (WI), Blanche Lincoln (AR), Michael Bennett (CO) and Joe Manchin (WV) have all been defeated. In Florida, Kendrick Meek scored only 11% of the vote. Barbara Boxer held California but only by half a percent. Even "safe" Democrats Mikulski (MD), Coons (DE) and Wyden (OR) had a stressful night, but ultimately prevailed, but only by 4%. Democrats release a statement condemning the newcomers Angle (NV), Johnson (WI), Buck (CO), Paul (KY), Rubio (FL), Miller (AK), Ayotte (NH), and Toomey (PA) as radical tea partiers who will not listen to their constituents. Democrats search among themselves for a new Majority Leader.

The gubernatorial situation offers little comfort. O'Malley held MD, Patrick held MA, Brown won CA and Lynch held New Hampshire and the good news stops there. Republican Governors will assume office in Vermont, Maine, Ohio, Iowa, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota and Pennsylvania among others. Alex Sink lost in FL by 10%; Perry won Texas as expected but by 20%. Ted Strickland and Chet Culver lost by 14% each. Dan Hickenlooper lost to Constitution Party candidate Tom Tancredo by 3%.

Pundits struggle to find words to describe what happened. Wave doesn't cut it, flood doesn't either. Tsunami? Nope. Surge? Nope. Storm? Maybe. Hurricane? Revolution? The list continues

The nation and the world are in shock. President Obama considers his options, now severely limited.


Scenario 2:
You’re a wealthy Republican from Potomac, MD. You step out your door, pick up the Washington Post and promptly drop your coffee when you read the headline. “Democrats Hold Congress, Suffer Minor Losses in Governor’s Races”'

Only 20 House seats fell, 5 republicans lost! Democrats suffered a net loss of only 1 senate seat. Harry Reid handily defeated Sharron Angle, Boxer crushed Fiorina, Bennett held against Buck. Democrats also upset Republicans in Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Indiana. A 3-way recount is underway in Alaska. Senators in the Southeast won, but only by slim margins. Coons and Mikulski obliterated their opponents. Rising stars Toomey (PA), Kirk (IL), Raese (WV), Johnson (WI), Paul (KY), Buck (CO), Rossi (WA), Rubio (FL), Miller (AK) and O’Donnell (DE) were all shot down.

The Governor’s results make you sick to your stomach. O’Malley won by 8%, Strickland by 4%. Perry won but by under 1%. Sink crushed Scott in Florida, Brown destroyed Whitman in California. Jan Brewer won by 0.7%. Democrats held their seats in the Midwest, fending off challenges in Wisconsin, Iowa, Ohio and Illinois.

Rumors fly that the Tea Party will stop supporting Republican candidates and form a third party because the poor performance. Obama, the DNC, the DCCC and the DSCC are thrilled. Michael Steele is forced to resign as head of the RNC.

Pundits struggle to explain what happened. How did the situation backfire so badly on the Republicans? The search for answers begins.

Scenario 3:
You’re an Independent in Chicago; you pick up the Tribune and read the headline, “Congress Hangs in the Balance as Recounts Begin”

Both parties have scored 216 house seats with 3 seats still too close to call. Congress will remain in Limbo for days, weeks maybe a month while the recounts are conducted and legal challenges are filed.

6 Senate seats changed hands with races in Wisconsin, Washington, Illinois and West Virginia still not called. Charlie Crist and Lisa Murkowski both won their races and are under pressure to reveal who they will caucus with when the new Senate takes their seats in January. Independents won Governor’s races in Maine and Rhode Island and put up a strong showing in Minnesota.
---------------------------------------------
So, what will determine what scenario comes to pass? One word: turnout. It is critical that both parties turnout their supporters in large quantities. Here’s a short, simplified explanation of what happens given the circumstances

Democrat
Republican
Result
High
High
Scenario III
Low
High
Scenario I
High
Low
Scenario II

There are a number of other factors that will play into the results but turnout will prove the largest, especially among Democrats. Low Democratic turnout will spell disaster for them not only this year but possibly 6 years from now. And in the media department, turnout stats will be used to evaluate whether or not the “enthusiasm gap” materialized and to what extent.

I must reiterate, if you do not vote, your authority to complain about what happens flies out the window, bounces off buildings, hits the road where it is run over by an 18-wheeler, an ambulance and then a hearse, falls into the sewer and is washed away.

Tonight and tomorrow morning, the final projections will be released.

There will of course be surprises, given the inaccuracy of polls and the projections. But the ultimate decider of any election is the voter. You will decide who controls Congress, which Senators and Governors stay or go. You determine the fate of President Obama’s agenda. 

The potential exists for a historic result from a historic election. The fate of the nation rests in our hands, exercise the most powerful right a citizen has and vote!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Final Analysis of the MD Early Vote

Let's get right to it. MD Early voting is over and the results are in (the counts, not the number of votes).

As we can clearly see from this graph, Democrats slammed Republicans in the Early Vote. Based on the data the following is to be assumed
  1. Almost all of the Republican votes went to Bob Ehrlich or Eric Wargotz
  2. Almost all of the Democratic votes went to Martin O'Malley and Barbara Mikulski
  3. The independent votes are split, with a larger fraction going to Ehrlich
And, I have some rankings for you, showing where the best performing areas were. First by congressional district

  1. 1st District (Eastern Shore) (Kratovil)
  2. 7th District (Howard County and Parts of Baltimore) (Cummings)
  3. 4th District (Eastern Montgomery and Western PG) (Edwards)
  4. 5th District (Southern Maryland and PG County) (Hoyer)
  5. 3rd District (Parts of Baltimore County) (Sarbanes)
  6. 2nd District (Parts of Baltimore and Harford Counties) (Ruppersberger)
  7. 8th District (Western and Southern Montgomery County) (Van Hollen)
  8. 6th District (Northern Maryland) (Bartlett)
The low performance of the 6th and 8th districts should be extremely troubling for Ehrlich, many of his votes will come from the Northern parts of the state and a sizable portion will come from Montgomery County. O'Malley should be pleased at the performance of the districts covering Baltimore and Prince George's counties. Lots of his votes will come from here. Because the board of elections doesn't release party stats by district, no analysis for the 1st district, a key race, can be provided.

Our next ranking is by counties
  1. Talbot - 14.46%
  2. Kent - 13.03%
  3. Queen Anne's - 9.12%
  4. Anne Arundel - 8.74%
  5. Howard - 8.73%
  6. Caroline - 8.38%
  7. Worcester - 7.80%
  8. Prince George's - 7.45%
  9. Harford - 7.44%
  10. Wicomico - 7.32%
  11. Somerset - 7.31%
  12. Dorchester - 6.82%
  13. Baltimore County - 6.34%
  14. Calvert - 5.80%
  15. Charles - 5.70%
  16. Cecil - 5.66%
  17. Baltimore City - 5.44%
  18. Garrett - 5.06%
  19. Carroll - 4.95%
  20. Saint Mary's - 4.85%
  21. Montgomery - 4.66%
  22. Frederick - 4.22%
  23. Washington - 2.52%
  24. Allegany 2.42%
The State turnout rate was 6.33%

Please note: these county ranks are biased against the more populous counties (Montgomery, PG, Baltimore). The Eastern Shore counties have smaller populations and therefore larger turnout rates. 

In general, the enthusiasm gap or Republican tide doesn't seem to be materializing in Maryland. 

Thursday, October 28, 2010

New Pages

So I have published some new pages along the top (look at them! That's why they're there).
Here's what each page is

2010 House: the 109 top House Races
2010 Senate: the Senate Races
2010 Governor: the Governor's Races
Poll Closing Times: Use this on election day to gauge when you may know who your Congressman, Senator or Governor will be

Early Voting Update 10/28

Now 170,029 ballots have been cast. Democrats are exhibiting a huge lead in Early Voting, which ends in a few hours.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Early Voting Update 10/25

So far in this election 95,231 ballots have been cast in Maryland. here's the current breakdown
`

It is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay to early to interpret these results, but it seems that the "enthusiasm gap" doesn't exist in Maryland

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

This year is not going to be good for Democrats. But there is a silver lining.

The Senatorial picture isn't pretty but the good news is Dems will hold the majority in the Senate, though greatly reduced. In order for the Republicans to take the Senate they need to take West Virginia and knock out one of the following

  1. Sen. Boxer (California)
  2. Sen. Murray (Washington)
  3. Sen. Mikulski (Maryland)
And the picture isn't all rosy for the Republicans, a number of their projected gains or holds are by very slim margins. Illinois, Nevada, Colorado and Kentucky are all toss-up states and Alaska nominee Joe Miller is fending off a two-way challenge from Democrat Scott McAdams and Incumbent (defeated) Senator Lisa Murkowski.

The picture is far gloomier on the Democratic side, who will suffer symbolic and practical defeats. Although Obama no longer serves in the Senate, his seat is of major symbolic importance for both parties. The IL senate race leans Republican right now. The Democrats might also lose Majority Leader Harry Reid and Democratic titan, Russ Feingold of Wisconsin. Senator Bennett (CO) and Senator Lincoln (AR) are also at a disadvantage. They will also lose open Senate seats in North Dakota, Indiana and Pennsylvania. 

Some thoughts

I do not trust polls, I never have and never will. Its simple logic, polling 700 people in a state with an electorate of nearly 2 million is simply not accurate. PERIOD. I think if you're going to poll for anything you need at least 1,000 respondents. Also, national polls are bullshit. Not only because of the small sample sizes but also because national trends, especially in Congress don't seem to carry over to the districts. It has been said that this year is a bad one for Democrats with Dems trailing Republicans in generic ballot polls. But if you look at the map, traditional Democratic strongholds like LA, NY, the Northeast and Chicago are firmly Democratic. 538.com gives Republicans 0% to 1% chances to win in many of those districts.

Back to MD for a bit. In MD, registered Dems outnumber Republicans 2:1. Even if Ehrlich managed to turnout 100% of the Republican vote, it would give him a good number but not enough. That's why crossing party boundaries is essential for any Republican to win in Maryland, with the exception of Roscoe Bartlett (R-MD6), his district is solidly red.

If Ehrlich or Eric Wargotz want to stand a chance against Democratic titans, Martin O'Malley and Barbara Mikulski, they need to change their message. Ehrlich needs to head back to center and Wargotz should just give up right now, Tea Party values do not coincide with the average Marylander. Ehrlich, today, suffered a major setback, the Republican Governor's Association, which has been running ads in the DC area, is pulling those ads off the air and cutting its investment by 50%. A Gonzales poll, released today also gives MOM a 5-point lead (It is important to note, Gonzales tends to lean to the right).

What do you think? Feel free to comment below

PS. I do not care who you vote for, JUST F***ING VOTE, either by mail, early or on Election Day. If you don't you have no authority to whine.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Battle for the Senate- October 18 Update

Party
Democrats : 51 Seats
Republicans: 49 Seats



Pickups
Democrats : none
Republicans: Nevada (Reid), Colorado (Bennett), North Dakota (Open), Arkansas (Lincoln), Indiana (Open), Wisconsin (Feingold), Illinois (Open) and Pennsylvania (Open)

New Senators:
  1. Angle - NV
  2. Buck - CO
  3. Miller - AK
  4. Hoeven - ND
  5. Boozman - AR
  6. Coats - IN
  7. Johnson - WI
  8. Tommey - PA
  9. Kirk - IL
  10. Manchin - WV
  11. Paul - KY
  12. Ayotte - NH
  13. Rubio - FL
  14. Blunt - MO
  15. Blumenthal - CT
  16. Portman - OH
  17. Coons - DE
  18. Moran - KS


Majority
Democrats +1

Early Voting Update 10/18

As of October 18, the 2010 elections have begun in
Vermont, South Dakota, Iowa, Wyoming, Nebraska, Ohio, Wisconsin, California, Indiana, Arizona, Illinois, Kansas, Tennessee, West Virginia, North Carolina, New Mexico and Nevada, Washington and Oregon

This week the election begins in
Alaska, Hawaii, Utah, Colorado, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, North Dakota, Florida, Maryland and Washington DC

Oklahoma begins next week. Any state not mentioned doesn't have early voting

Progress Map:

Thursday, September 16, 2010

The MD Republican Primary

Tuesday night did not turn out the way the Murphy supporter's wished, but it did meet my expectations and other political analysts would agree with me. In response to my previous post I will now answer the questions I posed earlier.

1. Does Brian Murphy receive more out-of-state endorsements and funds due to Palin's endorsement?
- No, he did not receive any further endoresments and his fundraising remained abysmally low. In fact, John McCain actually endorsed Ehrlich in response
2.When and Where does Obama campaign in MD?
- He hasn't yet
3. If Murphy does become a more visible challenger, how does and to what extent does Ehrlich respond?
- Murphy stayed a shadow challenger, thereby forcing no response from Ehrlich
4. After the September 12 primary, what do the Ehrlich/Murphy supporters do?
- We don't know yet since there have been no post-primary polls
5. Does the small scandal around Mary Kane's (Ehrlich's running mate) husband develop further?
- Nope, local media lost track of the scandal in light of other stories
6. When do O'Malley and Ehrlich start flinging attack ads at each other?
- That started in late June, O'Malley struck first
7. What is the fundrasing ratio between O'Malley and Ehrlich/Murphy?
- The fundraising ratio between O'Malley and Ehrlich maintains somewhere between 2:1 and 3:1, depending on the county. Murphy raised $34,000 during a period when O'Malley raised near 1M and Ehrlich near 500K.
8. What is the final result of the Republican primary?
Ehrlich won 3/4 of the Republican vote and Murphy scored the other quarter
9, 10, 11, 12
- these questions pertain to the General Election
13. Which campaign mobilizes resources better and faster?
- It seems that O'Malley has more resources and much larger pool, now that the state delegate, senate and county elections are over. In Maryland, these are tantamount to election
14. Does the Tea Party have any impact on the Republican primary?
- It had a minimal impact, although it could have siphoned votes away from Ehrlich
15. What kind of screw-ups get media attention?
- There have been plenty of gaffes but none have maintained more than a spot on the evening and 11pm news
16. When and What do they debate?
- The debates have been scheduled, but have not occured yet. Both camps wanted to wait for the primary to end.