Politics and Religion

By the numbers, Romney Wins 295 to 243
Snowman39 2224 reads
posted

Based on Rasmussen (traditionally the most historical poll) and swing state polls, looks like Romney wins 295 to 243.

Even if he is slightly off, undecideds break for the challenger 2 to 1 and republican turnout is predicted to be +1 over democratic turnout.

I know the usual suspects will go bat-shit when they read this, but facts are facts.

salonpas262 reads

Go to www.Electoral-vote.com it aggregates all polling data. If Rasmussen is included, Obama has 280 to Romney's 220. If you remove Rasmussen polling data, it gives Obama 303 to Romney's 202.

salonpas234 reads

................. A home in N.H. where he is down 5 points. If he buys a trailer in Miss., He's screwed!!

Snowman39160 reads

Of course, unliek Al Gore, I am pretty sure he will win his home state.

And Yes, he owns a LOT of homes, like me. We are the evil rich!!!!

BWAHAHAHAHAHHAHA ;-)

Snowman39224 reads

A MOJOR pollster vs. some no name web-site? Really ?!?!?!

Man, you smack of desperation...

In the past Rasmussen has had the largest difference from the final results on any National polling service.  They tend to be skewed to the Right.

Timbow160 reads

Posted By: Makwa
In the past Rasmussen has had the largest difference from the final results on any National polling service.  They tend to be skewed to the Right.  

OBAMA IS WINNING , almost at 305 electorial

The FiveThirtyEight forecast model has found the past several days of battleground state polling to be reasonably strong for Barack Obama, with his chances of winning the Electoral College increasing as a result. The intuition behind this ought to be very simple: Mr. Obama is maintaining leads in the polls in Ohio and other states that are sufficient for him to win 270 electoral votes.

Friday featured a large volume of swing state polling, including three polls of Ohio, each of which showed Mr. Obama ahead by margins ranging from two to four percentage points.

Between Ohio and the other battleground states, Mr. Obama held leads in 11 polls on Friday, against four leads for Mitt Romney’s and two ties. Mr. Romney’s leads came in North Carolina and Florida, two states where the FiveThirtyEight forecast already had him favored.

To the extent that there was a trend in the state polls, it was slightly favorable for Mr. Obama. Among the eight polls that had previously published numbers after the first presidential debate in Denver, Mr. Obama gained about one percentage point, on average.


The national polls out on Friday were not terribly newsworthy. Mr. Obama had a miniscule lead of 0.2 points between the eight national tracking polls that were published, reversing an equally small 0.2-point advantage for Mr. Romney in the same surveys on Thursday

You can see here my thoughts on reconciling the differences between state and national polls. They may be reflective of a potential split outcome between the popular vote and the Electoral College, but there are other plausible hypotheses as well. Specifically, it could be that the national polls slightly underrate Mr. Obama’s position, that the state polls slightly overrate it, or both.

The FiveThirtyEight forecast has Mr. Obama leading the popular vote along with the Electoral College, because it uses both state and national polls to calibrate its estimate of where the vote stands. Also, however, Mr. Obama’s state polls were adjusted slightly downward because his national polls remain middling.

Still, our state-by-state forecasts are extremely similar to those issued by our competitors. For example, we had Mr. Obama projected to win Ohio by 2.4 percentage points as of Friday. That compares to a 2.3 percentage-point lead for Mr. Obama in the Real Clear Politics average of Ohio polls, a 2.9-point advantage for him in the Huffington Post Pollster model, and a 2.7-point edge for him according to Talking Points Memo’s Poll Tracker.

How often does a lead of two or three points in the polling average, with 10 days to go until the election, translate into a victory in the state?

This is the sort of question that the FiveThirtyEight forecast is designed to address. But a simpler method is to just look at what happened when candidates held similar advantages in the past.

In the table that follows, I have attempted to recreate a simple polling average for competitive states in past elections, using about the same rules that Real Clear Politics applies.

In particular, I’ve looked at all states in our database in which there were at least three distinct polling firms that conducted surveys in the window between 10 days and three weeks before the election. Like Real Clear Politics, I used only the most recent poll (the one closest to the 10-day cutoff) if the polling firm surveyed the state multiple times during this period. I used the version of the poll among likely voters if it was available, defaulting to registered voter numbers otherwise.



http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0810/images/callie/00.jpg

http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/27/oct-26-state-poll-averages-usually-call-election-right/

The reason for this is because the larger the polling sample, the more accurate the result.

Mark my words: Obama will win with 303 electoral votes.

Timbow192 reads

Posted By: willywonka4u

Mark my words: Obama will win with 303 electoral votes.

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