538: What a Clinton landslide would look like (user search)
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  538: What a Clinton landslide would look like (search mode)
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Author Topic: 538: What a Clinton landslide would look like  (Read 2828 times)
freedomburns
FreedomBurns
Jr. Member
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Posts: 1,237


Political Matrix
E: -7.23, S: -8.70

« on: August 14, 2016, 12:11:07 AM »

http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-a-clinton-landslide-would-look-like/?ex_cid=2016-forecast

What A Clinton Landslide Would Look Like
By Nate Silver
AUG 12, 2016 AT 1:40 PM

<...>

But there’s another possibility staring us right in the face: A potential Hillary Clinton landslide. Our polls-only model projects Clinton to win the election by 7.7 percentage points, about the same margin by which Barack Obama beat John McCain in 2008. And it assigns a 35 percent chance to Clinton winning by double digits.

Our other model, polls-plus, is much more conservative about Clinton’s prospects. If this were an ordinary election, the smart money would be on the race tightening down the stretch run, and coming more into line with economic “fundamentals” that suggest the election ought to be close. Since this is how the polls-plus model “thinks,” it projects Clinton to win by around 4 points, about the margin by which Obama beat Mitt Romney in 2012 — a solid victory but a long way from a landslide.

<...>

Perhaps the strongest evidence for a potential landslide against Trump is in the state-by-state polling, which has shown him underperforming in any number of traditionally Republican states. It’s not just Georgia and Arizona, where polls have shown a fairly close race all year. At various points, polls have shown Clinton drawing within a few percentage points of Trump — and occasionally even leading him — in states such as Utah, South Carolina, Texas, Alaska, Kansas and even Mississippi.

Just how bad could it get? Let’s start by giving Clinton the 332 electoral votes that Obama won in 2012. That’s obviously not a safe assumption: The race could shift back toward Trump, and even if it doesn’t, Clinton could lose states such as Iowa or Nevada, where her polling has been middling even after her convention bounce. But as I said, we’re going to focus on Clinton’s upside case today.

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Ok, that is interesting.  Thanks, Nate.  Now back to finishing off this glass of wine.
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freedomburns
FreedomBurns
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,237


Political Matrix
E: -7.23, S: -8.70

« Reply #1 on: August 14, 2016, 12:24:04 AM »

See? Mississippi is actually, possibly, conceivably in play.  Don't be a hater.  Drink more red wine and BELIEVE..
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freedomburns
FreedomBurns
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,237


Political Matrix
E: -7.23, S: -8.70

« Reply #2 on: August 14, 2016, 12:28:58 AM »

Dang it.  i looked.
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