Home
2012
Election Results
Election Info
Weblog
Wiki
Search
Email
Site Info
Store
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 23, 2013, 11:21:53 pm
News:
Please delete your old personal messages.
Atlas Forum
Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
Presidential Election Trends
(Moderator:
Bacon King
)
2024
« previous
next »
Pages:
[
1
]
Poll
Question:
Who wins in 2024?
Democrat
10 (62.5%)
Republican
1 (6.3%)
269-269
0 (0%)
I have no idea
5 (31.3%)
Show Pie Chart
Total Voters: 15
Author
Topic: 2024 (Read 898 times)
Buddha
tmcusa2
YaBB God
Posts: 1095
Political Matrix
E: -7.13, S: -7.18
2024
«
on:
September 06, 2011, 09:49:05 pm »
Logged
help with posting:
http://uselectionatlas.org/FORUM/index.php?action=help;page=post#bbcref
If you are interested in languages check this out:
http://home.unilang.org/main/forum/index.php
Californian Tony
Antonio V
YaBB God
Posts: 24679
Political Matrix
E: -6.45, S: -4.87
Re: 2024
«
Reply #1 on:
September 07, 2011, 03:47:41 am »
Strong numbers in the West, Florida and Northeast is enough to give dems a win.
Logged
Truer today than it was yesterday.
"A good portion of this country has created an alternate universe. I call this place were these folks live Bullsh*t Mountain. The denizens of Bullsh*t Mountain believe many things: they believe that a Kenyan Muslim President has fundamentally changed the relationship between government and the people of this country."
Jon Stewart
greenforest32
YaBB God
Posts: 2191
Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.43
Re: 2024
«
Reply #2 on:
September 07, 2011, 04:30:30 am »
Democrats.
The Southwest is going to turn over to the left strongly from the Hispanic voter population growth. By 2024 Arizona and Texas will be voting Democrat in national elections.
Just look at Texas in 2008. It was McCain @ ~55% and Obama @ ~44%:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Texas,_2008
Most polls for 2012 show that 11-12% gap closing to 5% or less. In fact the recent polls show Perry LOSING to Obama in Texas in 2012. Good luck keeping Texas electoral votes for Republicans after 2012.
«
Last Edit: September 07, 2011, 04:38:39 am by greenforest32
»
Logged
Californian Tony
Antonio V
YaBB God
Posts: 24679
Political Matrix
E: -6.45, S: -4.87
Re: 2024
«
Reply #3 on:
September 07, 2011, 04:56:45 am »
Quote from: greenforest32 on September 07, 2011, 04:30:30 am
Democrats.
The Southwest is going to turn over to the left strongly from the Hispanic voter population growth. By 2024 Arizona and Texas will be voting Democrat in national elections.
Just look at Texas in 2008. It was McCain @ ~55% and Obama @ ~44%:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Texas,_2008
Most polls for 2012 show that 11-12% gap closing to 5% or less. In fact the recent polls show
Perry LOSING to Obama in Texas in 2012
. Good luck keeping Texas electoral votes for Republicans after 2012.
Really ?
Reliable
polls ?
I have difficulties to imagine Texas already voting dem in 2012 barring a dem landslide, let alone if a texan is on the ballot...
Logged
Truer today than it was yesterday.
"A good portion of this country has created an alternate universe. I call this place were these folks live Bullsh*t Mountain. The denizens of Bullsh*t Mountain believe many things: they believe that a Kenyan Muslim President has fundamentally changed the relationship between government and the people of this country."
Jon Stewart
greenforest32
YaBB God
Posts: 2191
Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.43
Re: 2024
«
Reply #4 on:
September 07, 2011, 06:23:42 am »
Quote from: Fast Drei Prozent on September 07, 2011, 04:56:45 am
Quote from: greenforest32 on September 07, 2011, 04:30:30 am
Democrats.
The Southwest is going to turn over to the left strongly from the Hispanic voter population growth. By 2024 Arizona and Texas will be voting Democrat in national elections.
Just look at Texas in 2008. It was McCain @ ~55% and Obama @ ~44%:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election_in_Texas,_2008
Most polls for 2012 show that 11-12% gap closing to 5% or less. In fact the recent polls show
Perry LOSING to Obama in Texas in 2012
. Good luck keeping Texas electoral votes for Republicans after 2012.
Really ?
Reliable
polls ?
I have difficulties to imagine Texas already voting dem in 2012 barring a dem landslide, let alone if a texan is on the ballot...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statewide_opinion_polling_for_the_United_States_presidential_election,_2012#Texas
Logged
a Person
YaBB God
Posts: 3246
Political Matrix
E: -6.32, S: -7.30
Re: 2024
«
Reply #5 on:
September 07, 2011, 11:55:55 am »
Random 2024 scenario:
(After two-term Obama, two-term Huntsman)
Isabel Gutierrez* (D-TX) / Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) 404 EV, 55% PV
Josh Mandel (R-OH) / Marco Rubio (R-FL) 134 EV, 43% PV
*fictional
NOTE: Nebraska has four EVs, not five. disregard the gray CD.
Logged
Senator Snowstalker
Snowstalker
YaBB God
Posts: 10994
Political Matrix
E: -7.10, S: -3.13
Re: 2024
«
Reply #6 on:
September 07, 2011, 03:06:37 pm »
Pennsylvania isn't going to be a Republican state--Allegheny, Lackawanna, and Philadelphia alone make it competitive.
In addition, I honestly fail to see a D trend in Arizona, Texas, Georgia, the Dakotas, and especially not Tennessee. Once the Republicans get back on track and move to the center after another 2 or 3 straight losses, they'll appeal more to Hispanics, a group they'd do better with if they stopped race-baiting.
Logged
Quote from: 31: A New Bushie on April 30, 2013, 01:33:54 pm
I wouldn't touch the Carnival cruise ships with a 10 foot pole. Too many things have gone wrong in the last ~6 months for me to even consider it anymore.
Skill and Chance
YaBB God
Posts: 1478
Re: 2024
«
Reply #7 on:
September 07, 2011, 05:06:06 pm »
Scenario 1: Dems become more Libertarian, GOP becomes more Populist (Obama probably wins in 2012 and balances the budget)
Basically the GOP locks in its Ohio Valley/Rust Belt gains and the Dems lock in their Southern and Western gains.
Scenario 2: Dems become more Populist, GOP becomes more Libertarian (Obama probably loses in 2012 and Dems rebuild by running against budget cuts)
A pretty radically different electoral map: The Northeast and the interior South would be the new swing regions. I'd favor Scenario 1.
Logged
Senator Snowstalker
Snowstalker
YaBB God
Posts: 10994
Political Matrix
E: -7.10, S: -3.13
Re: 2024
«
Reply #8 on:
September 07, 2011, 05:41:41 pm »
I predict something in between today and Scenario B. Ignoring the Lean/Likely/Safe, here's a possibility:
Of course, the type of candidate on both is still important; Al Gore did better than John Kerry in the South because he was running as a moderate populist, with the latter forced into an anti-war, socially liberal position that's toxic to Southern voters. Similarly, a John Thune won't do as well in the West and New Hampshire as a Jon Huntsman or Chris Christie.
Logged
Quote from: 31: A New Bushie on April 30, 2013, 01:33:54 pm
I wouldn't touch the Carnival cruise ships with a 10 foot pole. Too many things have gone wrong in the last ~6 months for me to even consider it anymore.
cavalcade
YaBB God
Posts: 746
Political Matrix
E: 2.71, S: -3.13
Re: 2024
«
Reply #9 on:
September 07, 2011, 06:28:05 pm »
I pretty much agree with the OP. Just flip TX, VA, IA, and MI to the Democrats and NH and FL to the Republicans.
Logged
Buddha
tmcusa2
YaBB God
Posts: 1095
Political Matrix
E: -7.13, S: -7.18
Re: 2024
«
Reply #10 on:
September 07, 2011, 07:10:07 pm »
The point of the map was to show how the Democrats need to focus on swing states like Florida, Nevada, and Arizona which have gained electoral votes, instead of states that lost electoral votes in the last census, namely Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan. It isn't so much to suggest a possible result, but to show where the new swings states are going to be going forward. If you go to the calculator for years over the last 50 years you will see that the states in the map only reached 270 in 2000, you will see a gradual increase in the totals for the map which finally leveled off in 2010. Will the numbers continue to go up? That is the question.
Logged
help with posting:
http://uselectionatlas.org/FORUM/index.php?action=help;page=post#bbcref
If you are interested in languages check this out:
http://home.unilang.org/main/forum/index.php
Buddha
tmcusa2
YaBB God
Posts: 1095
Political Matrix
E: -7.13, S: -7.18
Re: 2024
«
Reply #11 on:
September 07, 2011, 07:23:03 pm »
Obama won all the states that Lincoln won in 1860 and a few more. This shows how the map has completed flipped in the old "Union" states. If Obama can hold onto three Lincoln states Ohio, NH, and Iowa he will get 270 electoral votes. This is a scenario which is quite different from the map I posted. The problem with the Ohio, NH, Iowa combination is that after 2020 Ohio is likely to lose electoral votes and the candidate in 2024 would have to win at least one of the Rocky mountain states or a southern state.
Logged
help with posting:
http://uselectionatlas.org/FORUM/index.php?action=help;page=post#bbcref
If you are interested in languages check this out:
http://home.unilang.org/main/forum/index.php
Skill and Chance
YaBB God
Posts: 1478
Re: 2024
«
Reply #12 on:
September 07, 2011, 11:54:41 pm »
Also, one thing that shows pretty clearly in these maps is that the Democrats could be locked out of a Senate majority for a long time if they lose ground in New England. They could end up with a situation where there are <20 Democratic leaning states in a 50/50 election.
Logged
Skill and Chance
YaBB God
Posts: 1478
Re: 2024
«
Reply #13 on:
September 08, 2011, 12:01:30 am »
Quote from: Snowstalker on September 07, 2011, 05:41:41 pm
I predict something in between today and Scenario B. Ignoring the Lean/Likely/Safe, here's a possibility:
Of course, the type of candidate on both is still important; Al Gore did better than John Kerry in the South because he was running as a moderate populist, with the latter forced into an anti-war, socially liberal position that's toxic to Southern voters. Similarly, a John Thune won't do as well in the West and New Hampshire as a Jon Huntsman or Chris Christie.
I'm reasonably confident that NC will vote like a southern enclave of NY/New England by 2024. Once Charlotte develops Fairfax-style multiethnic suburbs it's all over. I'd say there's a 50/50 chance that the same thing happens to Georgia.
Logged
Pages:
[
1
]
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
-----------------------------
=> 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
===> 2016 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2016 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
=> U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Results
===> 2000 U.S. Presidential Election Results
=> Presidential Election Trends
=> Election What-ifs?
===> Past Election What-ifs (US)
===> Alternative Elections
===> International What-ifs
-----------------------------
Other Elections - Analysis and Discussion
-----------------------------
=> Gubernatorial/Statewide Elections
===> 2013 & Odd Year Gubernatorial Election Polls
===> 2014 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> Congressional Elections
===> 2014 Senatorial Election Polls
=> International Elections
=> Election Predictions
-----------------------------
Questions and Answers
-----------------------------
=> Presidential Election Process
===> Electoral Reform
===> Polling
=> The Atlas
===> How To
-----------------------------
General Discussion
-----------------------------
=> Constitution and Law
=> Religion & Philosophy
=> History
===> Alternative History
-----------------------------
General Politics
-----------------------------
=> U.S. General Discussion
=> Political Geography & Demographics
=> International General Discussion
=> Economics
=> Individual Politics
=> Political Debate
===> Political Essays & Deliberation
===> Book Reviews and Discussion
-----------------------------
Election Archive
-----------------------------
=> 2012 Elections
===> 2012 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2012 House Election Polls
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
===> 2012 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2012 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> 2010 Elections
===> 2010 House Election Polls
===> 2010 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2010 Gubernatorial Election Polls
=> 2008 Elections
===> 2008 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2008 Gubernatorial Election Polls
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential General Election Polls
===> 2008 U.S. Presidential Primary Election Polls
=> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Campaign
===> 2004 U.S. Presidential Election Polls
=> 2006 Elections
===> 2006 Senatorial Election Polls
===> 2006 Gubernatorial Election Polls
-----------------------------
Forum Community
-----------------------------
=> Forum Community
===> Forum Community Election Match-ups
=> Election and History Games
===> Mock Parliment
===> Town Hall
===> Survivor
===> Interactive Timelines
=> Off-topic Board
-----------------------------
Atlas Fantasy Elections
-----------------------------
=> Atlas Fantasy Elections
===> Voting Booth
=> Atlas Fantasy Government
===> Constitutional Convention
===> Regional Governments
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Powered by SMF 1.1.18
|
SMF © 2013, Simple Machines
Loading...