Which Republican Senate seats will a Democrat win?
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  Which Republican Senate seats will a Democrat win?
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Poll
Question: Well?
#1
Pennsylvania
 
#2
Montana
 
#3
Rhode Island
 
#4
Missouri
 
#5
Ohio
 
#6
Arizona
 
#7
Tenneseee
 
#8
Virginia
 
#9
Nevada
 
#10
NOTA
 
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Total Voters: 52

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Author Topic: Which Republican Senate seats will a Democrat win?  (Read 4269 times)
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jfern
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« on: June 01, 2006, 04:33:56 PM »

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Sam Spade
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« Reply #1 on: June 01, 2006, 04:57:17 PM »

I'll get to this later, fern.  Just fyi, I say the odds right now place the numbers of Dem pickups at roughly 3-4.  This can change, though.
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Frodo
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« Reply #2 on: June 01, 2006, 06:15:33 PM »

Pennsylvania and Montana (and maybe Ohio) are the most likely at this point -maybe Rhode Island too if Lincoln Chafee is defeated in the primary. 
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Soaring Eagle
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« Reply #3 on: June 01, 2006, 06:16:29 PM »

All of the ones listed except for AZ and NV. We only win VA if Webb wins the Democratic primary, though.
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Harry
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« Reply #4 on: June 01, 2006, 07:48:33 PM »

Pennsylvania
Montana
Rhode Island
Arizona
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Miamiu1027
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« Reply #5 on: June 01, 2006, 07:49:52 PM »

None
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nclib
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« Reply #6 on: June 01, 2006, 07:58:43 PM »

Pennsylvania
Montana
Rhode Island (only if Laffey wins primary, otherwise lean Rep.)
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Jake
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« Reply #7 on: June 01, 2006, 10:20:03 PM »

Montana, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. I wouldn't be surprised if Rhode Island is won either.
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Eraserhead
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« Reply #8 on: June 01, 2006, 10:22:53 PM »

Pennsylvania
Montana
Ohio
Rhode Island
Missouri
and just maybe Arizona

Perhaps a little hopeful on my part but thats what I think at the moment.
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Nym90
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« Reply #9 on: June 01, 2006, 10:24:08 PM »

My current prediction is PA, MT, MO, OH, RI, and TN, although the last two are probably a bit on the optimistic side.
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TomC
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« Reply #10 on: June 02, 2006, 10:52:23 AM »

Pennsylvania and Ohio
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« Reply #11 on: June 02, 2006, 02:38:07 PM »

Pennsylvania (Santorum forgot where he came from)
Montana (Burns blew it)
Rhode Island (Chafee has right AND left flank troubles)
Ohio (DeWine has trouble with gun owners)

I'm least confident with Ohio(Strickland would beat DeWine big), but I think Taft "fouled" Ohio up beyond all recognition.
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Sam Spade
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« Reply #12 on: June 02, 2006, 02:45:10 PM »

Anyway, I said I'd get to this later and I will.

Montana and Pennsylvania stand the highest chance of turning.  I give about an 80% of PA turning right now and about a 60% chance of Montana turning.  A lot about Montana depends on the nominee.

Missouri is the hard one for me to figure.  Talent's approval ratings are fairly strong and there is simply going to be very little "name recognition" bounce for McCaskill because she is already well-known.  But the closeness of the race at this point and the low Talent numbers make me uneasy in saying much.  I'm putting it at 35% chance of flipping, but this one probably has the most room to change.  It will either become ultra-competitive or relatively safe.

In Rhode Island, I think Chafee's biggest concern is the primary.  I think he's ahead right now and stands a 60%-65% chance of winning it.  If he wins the primary, I will probably put this race down in the Ohio category.  Right now, a 35% chance of flipping, slightly below Missouri

Which brings me to Ohio.  Do you believe Rasmussen or Mason-Dixon/uni poll?  Rasmussen, like SUSA, is going to be more turnout-based, since they do somewhat similar styles.  His one-day polling sample worries me though, and right now I would give much more cred to MD over the others.  I place Ohio at a 30% chance of going right now.

One of my general comments about the polling season so far is most of the polling has come from Rasmussen, which makes me wonder if we're not judging races too much on his polls.  Turnout-based samples tend to become more accurate towards election-time, but can be way off in the beginning, so I have a little bit of leeriness with giving too much credit to him.

I think Arizona has more potential to move than Tennessee right now.  Still, both are on the cusp of Lean/Likely on my lists and rate at a 15%-20% chance of movement (roughly the same as Maryland on the Dem list, for those keeping score).

Virginia is going to be tough.  You go with Webb, you could possibly snag conservative Indys and Dems, but DailyKos notwithstanding, I worry about the potential impact in NoVA.  Miller will obviously lose.  I think Allen could be kept under 60%, but under 55% will need a lot of luck right now.

Nevada is on the cusp of going safe for me right now.  Research 2000, a usually Dem-leaning pollster has it at 52%-32%.  Ensign probably gets the same amount as Reid did in 2004, maybe a tad more or less, depending on circumstances.

Like I said 3-4 is the most likely number here for now.  Above 5 is probably >5% at this time.
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« Reply #13 on: June 02, 2006, 10:48:10 PM »

I think our chances in Ohio are pretty slim. It's close now, but Sherrod Brown just isn't an exciting candidate. Hackett had a tendency to shoot his mouth off but at least he was energizing. Unless Strickland's lead solidifies at 15-20% and he can carry Brown on his coattails, I think this one will just slide off the map.

Hackett would have had a great matchup against DeWine with the gun issue added to the mix. Brown and DeWine are both gun grabbers.

That said, I think the base will still skip that race.
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Gustaf
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« Reply #14 on: June 03, 2006, 03:28:44 PM »

Anyway, I said I'd get to this later and I will.

Montana and Pennsylvania stand the highest chance of turning.  I give about an 80% of PA turning right now and about a 60% chance of Montana turning.  A lot about Montana depends on the nominee.

Missouri is the hard one for me to figure.  Talent's approval ratings are fairly strong and there is simply going to be very little "name recognition" bounce for McCaskill because she is already well-known.  But the closeness of the race at this point and the low Talent numbers make me uneasy in saying much.  I'm putting it at 35% chance of flipping, but this one probably has the most room to change.  It will either become ultra-competitive or relatively safe.

In Rhode Island, I think Chafee's biggest concern is the primary.  I think he's ahead right now and stands a 60%-65% chance of winning it.  If he wins the primary, I will probably put this race down in the Ohio category.  Right now, a 35% chance of flipping, slightly below Missouri

Which brings me to Ohio.  Do you believe Rasmussen or Mason-Dixon/uni poll?  Rasmussen, like SUSA, is going to be more turnout-based, since they do somewhat similar styles.  His one-day polling sample worries me though, and right now I would give much more cred to MD over the others.  I place Ohio at a 30% chance of going right now.

One of my general comments about the polling season so far is most of the polling has come from Rasmussen, which makes me wonder if we're not judging races too much on his polls.  Turnout-based samples tend to become more accurate towards election-time, but can be way off in the beginning, so I have a little bit of leeriness with giving too much credit to him.

I think Arizona has more potential to move than Tennessee right now.  Still, both are on the cusp of Lean/Likely on my lists and rate at a 15%-20% chance of movement (roughly the same as Maryland on the Dem list, for those keeping score).

Virginia is going to be tough.  You go with Webb, you could possibly snag conservative Indys and Dems, but DailyKos notwithstanding, I worry about the potential impact in NoVA.  Miller will obviously lose.  I think Allen could be kept under 60%, but under 55% will need a lot of luck right now.

Nevada is on the cusp of going safe for me right now.  Research 2000, a usually Dem-leaning pollster has it at 52%-32%.  Ensign probably gets the same amount as Reid did in 2004, maybe a tad more or less, depending on circumstances.

Like I said 3-4 is the most likely number here for now.  Above 5 is probably >5% at this time.

Sam, I'm not following...if I read you correctly you're saying that Democrats only have 40%+ chances in 2 states and yet are likely to take 3-4? Huh

Otherwise, I'm with you on the analysis, though I would rate RI and MO closer to 50%.
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adam
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« Reply #15 on: June 03, 2006, 08:38:41 PM »

Pennsylvania and Montana are givens, but the race I'm monitering will be the Virginia senate race against George Allen. If the Dems play their cards right they might be able to unseat who many are crowning the next president.
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Sam Spade
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« Reply #16 on: June 03, 2006, 10:26:18 PM »

Anyway, I said I'd get to this later and I will.

Montana and Pennsylvania stand the highest chance of turning.  I give about an 80% of PA turning right now and about a 60% chance of Montana turning.  A lot about Montana depends on the nominee.

Missouri is the hard one for me to figure.  Talent's approval ratings are fairly strong and there is simply going to be very little "name recognition" bounce for McCaskill because she is already well-known.  But the closeness of the race at this point and the low Talent numbers make me uneasy in saying much.  I'm putting it at 35% chance of flipping, but this one probably has the most room to change.  It will either become ultra-competitive or relatively safe.

In Rhode Island, I think Chafee's biggest concern is the primary.  I think he's ahead right now and stands a 60%-65% chance of winning it.  If he wins the primary, I will probably put this race down in the Ohio category.  Right now, a 35% chance of flipping, slightly below Missouri

Which brings me to Ohio.  Do you believe Rasmussen or Mason-Dixon/uni poll?  Rasmussen, like SUSA, is going to be more turnout-based, since they do somewhat similar styles.  His one-day polling sample worries me though, and right now I would give much more cred to MD over the others.  I place Ohio at a 30% chance of going right now.

One of my general comments about the polling season so far is most of the polling has come from Rasmussen, which makes me wonder if we're not judging races too much on his polls.  Turnout-based samples tend to become more accurate towards election-time, but can be way off in the beginning, so I have a little bit of leeriness with giving too much credit to him.

I think Arizona has more potential to move than Tennessee right now.  Still, both are on the cusp of Lean/Likely on my lists and rate at a 15%-20% chance of movement (roughly the same as Maryland on the Dem list, for those keeping score).

Virginia is going to be tough.  You go with Webb, you could possibly snag conservative Indys and Dems, but DailyKos notwithstanding, I worry about the potential impact in NoVA.  Miller will obviously lose.  I think Allen could be kept under 60%, but under 55% will need a lot of luck right now.

Nevada is on the cusp of going safe for me right now.  Research 2000, a usually Dem-leaning pollster has it at 52%-32%.  Ensign probably gets the same amount as Reid did in 2004, maybe a tad more or less, depending on circumstances.

Like I said 3-4 is the most likely number here for now.  Above 5 is probably >5% at this time.

Sam, I'm not following...if I read you correctly you're saying that Democrats only have 40%+ chances in 2 states and yet are likely to take 3-4? Huh

Otherwise, I'm with you on the analysis, though I would rate RI and MO closer to 50%.

I count 50% as being more likely than not chance of flipping.  If there are three seats with a 35% chance of flipping, it means to me that there's about a 15% chance of neither of the three flipping or all three flipping.  Though this is not mathmatically correct, it works in my mind.  Smiley

For example, on the Democratic seats, I would place Minnesota at the 30% level and New Jersey at the 25% level, so this translates to me that there's a 50-50 chance of flipping.

Hope I've confused you further.  Smiley
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Nym90
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« Reply #17 on: June 04, 2006, 01:51:20 PM »

Anyway, I said I'd get to this later and I will.

Montana and Pennsylvania stand the highest chance of turning.  I give about an 80% of PA turning right now and about a 60% chance of Montana turning.  A lot about Montana depends on the nominee.

Missouri is the hard one for me to figure.  Talent's approval ratings are fairly strong and there is simply going to be very little "name recognition" bounce for McCaskill because she is already well-known.  But the closeness of the race at this point and the low Talent numbers make me uneasy in saying much.  I'm putting it at 35% chance of flipping, but this one probably has the most room to change.  It will either become ultra-competitive or relatively safe.

In Rhode Island, I think Chafee's biggest concern is the primary.  I think he's ahead right now and stands a 60%-65% chance of winning it.  If he wins the primary, I will probably put this race down in the Ohio category.  Right now, a 35% chance of flipping, slightly below Missouri

Which brings me to Ohio.  Do you believe Rasmussen or Mason-Dixon/uni poll?  Rasmussen, like SUSA, is going to be more turnout-based, since they do somewhat similar styles.  His one-day polling sample worries me though, and right now I would give much more cred to MD over the others.  I place Ohio at a 30% chance of going right now.

One of my general comments about the polling season so far is most of the polling has come from Rasmussen, which makes me wonder if we're not judging races too much on his polls.  Turnout-based samples tend to become more accurate towards election-time, but can be way off in the beginning, so I have a little bit of leeriness with giving too much credit to him.

I think Arizona has more potential to move than Tennessee right now.  Still, both are on the cusp of Lean/Likely on my lists and rate at a 15%-20% chance of movement (roughly the same as Maryland on the Dem list, for those keeping score).

Virginia is going to be tough.  You go with Webb, you could possibly snag conservative Indys and Dems, but DailyKos notwithstanding, I worry about the potential impact in NoVA.  Miller will obviously lose.  I think Allen could be kept under 60%, but under 55% will need a lot of luck right now.

Nevada is on the cusp of going safe for me right now.  Research 2000, a usually Dem-leaning pollster has it at 52%-32%.  Ensign probably gets the same amount as Reid did in 2004, maybe a tad more or less, depending on circumstances.

Like I said 3-4 is the most likely number here for now.  Above 5 is probably >5% at this time.

Sam, I'm not following...if I read you correctly you're saying that Democrats only have 40%+ chances in 2 states and yet are likely to take 3-4? Huh

Otherwise, I'm with you on the analysis, though I would rate RI and MO closer to 50%.

I count 50% as being more likely than not chance of flipping.  If there are three seats with a 35% chance of flipping, it means to me that there's about a 15% chance of neither of the three flipping or all three flipping.  Though this is not mathmatically correct, it works in my mind.  Smiley

For example, on the Democratic seats, I would place Minnesota at the 30% level and New Jersey at the 25% level, so this translates to me that there's a 50-50 chance of flipping.

Hope I've confused you further.  Smiley

So in other words 35 percent actually means what most people would call 50 percent. Smiley Your mathematical system is very, um, interesting. Smiley

If there were truly a 35 percent chance of each of three seats changing hands, then there would be a 73 percent chance that at least one of them would change, and a 4 percent chance of all three changing.

If three seats were all at 50 percent, the chance of all three going the same way in either direction would be 12.5 percent, so at least your math isn't too far off in that case, once 35 is translated to 50. Smiley
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Sam Spade
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« Reply #18 on: June 04, 2006, 03:04:54 PM »

So in other words 35 percent actually means what most people would call 50 percent. Smiley Your mathematical system is very, um, interesting. Smiley

If there were truly a 35 percent chance of each of three seats changing hands, then there would be a 73 percent chance that at least one of them would change, and a 4 percent chance of all three changing.

If three seats were all at 50 percent, the chance of all three going the same way in either direction would be 12.5 percent, so at least your math isn't too far off in that case, once 35 is translated to 50. Smiley


Yep.  Chalk all this down to being lazy.  When it gets to be September or so, I'll be much more precise. 

Still, my prediction right now is 3-4 seats.  This is probably the best number to hang on.
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Eraserhead
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« Reply #19 on: June 05, 2006, 09:14:25 PM »

Pennsylvania and Montana are givens, but the race I'm monitering will be the Virginia senate race against George Allen. If the Dems play their cards right they might be able to unseat who many are crowning the next president.

I doubt it. If Warner ran they would have won though.
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jfern
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« Reply #20 on: June 05, 2006, 09:18:55 PM »

Pennsylvania and Montana are givens, but the race I'm monitering will be the Virginia senate race against George Allen. If the Dems play their cards right they might be able to unseat who many are crowning the next president.

I doubt it. If Warner ran they would have won though.

I'm hoping that Webb takes down Allen. It's a bit of a long shot, but perhaps an anti-Iraq war Democrat who was a Secretary of the Navy under Reagan is a winning combination.
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