Southeast PA town map
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
April 24, 2024, 12:08:30 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  U.S. Presidential Election Results
  2008 U.S. Presidential Election Results (Moderator: Dereich)
  Southeast PA town map
« previous next »
Pages: 1 [2] 3
Author Topic: Southeast PA town map  (Read 39219 times)
Hash
Hashemite
Moderators
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,409
Colombia


WWW Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #25 on: May 25, 2009, 06:55:11 PM »

You know, these would look awesome if we could combine them with my New Jersey map and Dave's New York map and eventually get the entire Mid-Atlantic by municipality.

And there's already a New England map!
Logged
RI
realisticidealist
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,776


Political Matrix
E: 0.39, S: 2.61

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #26 on: May 25, 2009, 11:20:48 PM »
« Edited: May 26, 2009, 12:47:05 PM by Senator Realisticidealist »

You know, these would look awesome if we could combine them with my New Jersey map and Dave's New York map and eventually get the entire Mid-Atlantic by municipality.

And there's already a New England map!


It's in the gallery too. Smiley
Logged
Verily
Cuivienen
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 16,663


Political Matrix
E: 1.81, S: -6.78

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #27 on: May 26, 2009, 12:32:27 PM »

Awesome, guys. I'll see if I can merge that with my New Jersey map tonight/soon. Need standard colorization for ties, though.



Anyone have Delaware data by municipality?
Logged
Antonio the Sixth
Antonio V
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 58,144
United States


Political Matrix
E: -7.87, S: -3.83

P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #28 on: May 26, 2009, 01:05:17 PM »

You know, these would look awesome if we could combine them with my New Jersey map and Dave's New York map and eventually get the entire Mid-Atlantic by municipality.

Would be great ! Cheesy
Logged
RI
realisticidealist
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,776


Political Matrix
E: 0.39, S: 2.61

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #29 on: May 26, 2009, 01:07:21 PM »

Anyone have Delaware data by municipality?

Dave has precinct data on the Atlas. I don't know about municipalities. We would also need to find a map, which I have yet to be able to do. The county subdivision map on the Census site is odd looking, but maybe that is just the way Delaware is. Undecided
Logged
Shilly
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 590
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #30 on: May 26, 2009, 01:13:38 PM »

Anyone have Delaware data by municipality?

I have a map by state house districts.


Data source is here. http://elections.delaware.gov/archive/elect08/elect08_general_election/html/elect08_gen_edrd.shtml
Logged
Filuwaúrdjan
Realpolitik
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 67,703
United Kingdom


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #31 on: May 27, 2009, 12:02:21 PM »

great stuff
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #32 on: May 27, 2009, 02:00:27 PM »


Anyone have Delaware data by municipality?

I don't think Delaware (or Maryland for that matter) are divided into towns/townships the same way other northeastern states are; I think most of the counties are unincorporated land.
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #33 on: May 27, 2009, 02:07:06 PM »

Here's the complete state by municipality!



I also updated the map of just the southeast to include Philadelphia by ward as well as the official results for Delaware County (the only thing that changed is Tinicum which is now for McCain).

Logged
RI
realisticidealist
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,776


Political Matrix
E: 0.39, S: 2.61

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #34 on: May 27, 2009, 04:13:16 PM »
« Edited: May 27, 2009, 04:16:47 PM by Senator Realisticidealist »

btw, Swing State Project has a map of maryland by precinct. Not in Atlas colors, but interesting and maybe useful.


EDIT: ok, I guess it is only some counties. Sigh. Sad
Logged
Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 40,325
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #35 on: May 27, 2009, 07:16:22 PM »

That PA map is a thing of beauty. Nice job!

Please tell me you're doing Ohio sometime soon. :-)
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #36 on: May 27, 2009, 08:16:57 PM »

Some rankings of municipalities:

BY MARGIN

OBAMA
1.   Philadelphia city (Philadelphia) 478,759
2.   Pittsburgh city (Allegheny) 81,994
3.   Erie city (Erie) 18,373
4.   Allentown city (Lehigh) 18,134
5.   Reading city (Berks) 15,964
6.   Harrisburg city (Dauphin) 15,451
7.   Lower Merion township (Montgomery) 15,259
8.   Chester city (Delaware) 13,544
9.   Cheltenham township (Montgomery) 12,685
10.   Scranton city (Lackawanna) 12,400
11.   Lancaster city (Lancaster) 11,961
12.   Bethlehem city (Northampton/Lehigh) 11,430
13.   Upper Darby township (Delaware) 10,260
14.   Abington township (Montgomery) 9,966
15.   State College borough (Centre) 8,992
16.   York city (York) 8,001
17.   Bristol township (Bucks) 7,896
18.   Norristown borough (Montgomery) 7,869
19.   Wilkinsburg borough (Allegheny) 7,404
20.   Penn Hills township (Allegheny) 7,135
21.   Haverford township (Delaware) 5,750
22.   Yeadon borough (Delaware) 5,627
23.   Bensalem township (Bucks) 4,985
24.   Wilkes-Barre city (Luzerne) 4,670
25.   Falls township (Bucks) 4,539

Mostly big cities, places with large black populations, and some blue collar towns. State College is of course home to Penn State University. Some notable exceptions here are Lower Merion (very rich and part of the Main Line – although the wealthier precincts weren’t actually that impressive for Obama – McCain was close in Gladwyne which was Bush territory; the township also has a large Jewish population). Haverford (home to Haverford College) and Abington are other exceptions, and Cheltenham has a large Jewish, black, and Asian population.

McCAIN
1.   Hempfield township (Westmoreland) 5,604
2.   Cranberry township (Butler) 4,219
3.   Peters township (Washington) 4,128
4.   North Huntingdon township (Westmoreland) 4,099
5.   Penn township (Westmoreland) 3,602
6.   Murrysville borough (Westmoreland) 3,399
7.   Antrim township (Franklin) 3,215
8.   Guilford township (Franklin) 2,661
9.   Greene township (Franklin) 2,600
10.   Unity township (Westmoreland) 2,539
11.   McCandless township (Allegheny) 2,483
12.   Adams township (Butler) 2,395
13.   Hampden township (Cumberland) 2,337
14.   Bethel Park township (Allegheny) 2,284
15.   Upper St. Clair township (Allegheny) 2,279
16.   West Lampeter township (Lancaster) 2,251
17.   Fairview township (York) 2,129
18.   Warwick township (Lancaster) 2,037
19.   Rapho township (Lancaster) 2,013
20.   Pine township (Allegheny) 1,944
21.   York township (York) 1,924
22.   Hampton township (Allegheny) 1,887
23.   Plum borough (Allegheny) 1,877
24.   Upper Allen township (Cumberland) 1,860
25.   Dover township (York) 1,837

Most of these are either upper middle income Pittsburgh suburbs (Cranberry, Peters, Bethel Park, Upper St. Clair, McCandless, Murrysville, etc.), rural towns, or suburbs of cities outside of the Southeast (where suburbs voted for Obama).

BY MARGIN (PERCENT)

OBAMA
1.   Yeadon borough (Delaware) + 90.83%
2.   Chester city (Delaware) + 86.77%
3.    Braddock borough (Allegheny) + 81.64%
4.   Wilkinsburg borough (Allegheny) + 80.23%
5.   Darby borough (Delaware) + 80.06%
6.   Chester township (Delaware) + 79.62%
7.   Rankin borough (Allegheny) + 79.09%
8.   Homestead borough (Allegheny) + 79.25%
9.   Colwyn borough (Delaware) + 75.68%
10.   Harrisburg city (Dauphin) + 74.12%
11.   Farrell city (Mercer) + 71.43%
12.   Coatesville city (Chester) + 69.97%
13.   South Coatesville borough (Chester) + 68.28%
14.   Swarthmore borough (Delaware) + 67.43%
15.   Philadelphia city (Philadelphia) + 66.68%
16.   Norristown borough (Montgomery) + 65.36%
17.   Reading city (Berks) + 62.21%
18.   Cheltenham township (Montgomery) + 60.65%
19.   Sharon Hill borough (Delaware) + 60.38%
20.   Duquesne city (Allegheny) + 58.72%
21.   East Lansdowne borough (Delaware) + 58.07%
22.   York city (York) + 56.00%
23.   Modena borough (Chester) + 54.21%
24.   Mount Carbon borough (Schuylkill) + 54.00%
25.   Lansdowne borough (Delaware) + 53.69%

Again, mostly places with large or majority black populations. Swarthmore is home to Swarthmore College.

McCAIN
1.   Green Hills borough (Washington) + 83.33%
2.   East Keating township (Clinton) + 81.82%
3.   Hovey township (Armstrong) + 75.00%
4.   Centralia borough (Columbia) + 71.43%
5.   Pleasantville borough (Bedford) + 69.41%
6.   Ceres township (McKean) + 68.49%
7.   Brown township (Lycoming) + 66.67%
8.   St. Clairsville borough (Bedford) + 66.67%
9.   Bastress township (Lycoming) + 66.18%
10.   Upper Mahantongo township (Schuylkill) + 65.93%
11.   Timblin borough (Jefferson) + 65.38%
12.   Wayne township (Armstrong) + 65.24%
13.   Menno township (Mifflin) + 65.03%
14.   Union township (Fulton) + 65.00%
15.   Mifflin township (Dauphin) + 64.43%
16.   Southampton township (Bedford) + 64.23%
17.   Allegheny township (Butler) + 63.71%
18.   Lincoln township (Bedford) + 63.68%
19.   Wellersburg borough (Somerset) + 63.51%
20.   Leacock township (Lancaster) + 63.21%
21.   Woodbury township (Bedford) + 62.53%
22.   Anthony township (Lycoming) + 62.02%
23.   Penn township (Huntingdon) + 61.28%
24.   Brady township (Clarion) + 60.87%
25.   West Beaver township (Snyder) + 60.29%

These all have tiny populations; all but two of them (Leacock and Penn) had less than 500 votes cast. Green Hills technically had the highest per capita income in the state in the 2000 Census but a population of 18. These towns are all rural and essentially all white.

BY PERCENTAGE

OBAMA
1.   Yeadon borough (Delaware) 95.21%
2.   Chester city (Delaware) 93.23%
3.   Braddock borough (Allegheny) 90.63%
4.   Wilkinsburg borough (Allegheny) 89.74%
5.   Darby borough (Delaware) 89.71%
6.   Chester township (Delaware) 89.64%
7.   Rankin borough (Allegheny) 89.26%
8.   Colwyn borough (Delaware) 87.64%
9.   Homestead borough (Allegheny) 87.59%
10.   Harrisburg city (Dauphin) 86.79%
11.   Farrell city (Mercer) 85.02%
12.   Coatesville city (Chester) 84.59%
13.   South Coatesville borough (Chester) 84.06%
14.   Swarthmore borough (Delaware) 83.27%
15.   Philadelphia city (Philadelphia) 83.01%
16.   Norristown borough (Montgomery) 82.32%
17.   Reading city (Berks) 80.50%
18.   Cheltenham township (Montgomery) 79.98%
19.   Sharon Hill borough (Delaware) 79.71%
20.   Duquesne city (Allegheny) 78.91%
21.   East Lansdowne borough (Delaware) 78.83%
22.   York city (York) 77.35%
23.   Millbourne borough (Delaware) 76.37%
24.   Lansdowne borough (Delaware) 76.13%
25.   Mount Carbon borough (Schuylkill) 76.00%

McCAIN
1.   Green Hills borough (Washington) 91.67%
2.   East Keating township (Clinton) 90.91%
3.   Hovey township (Armstrong) 87.50%
4.   Centralia borough (Columbia) 85.71%
5.   Pleasantville borough (Bedford) 84.71%
6.   St Clairsville borough (Bedford) 83.33%
7.   Ceres township (McKean) 83.33%
8.   Bastress township (Lycoming) 82.72%
9.   Timblin borough (Jefferson) 82.69%
10.   Brown township (Lycoming) 82.61%
11.   Wayne township (Armstrong) 82.19%
12.   Union township (Fulton) 82.19%
13.   Upper Mahantongo township (Schuylkill) 82.02%
14.   Menno township (Mifflin) 81.60%
15.   Mifflin township (Dauphin) 81.42%
16.   Woodbury township (Bedford) 81.26%
17.   Southampton township (Bedford) 81.11%
18.   Wellersburg borough (Somerset) 81.08%
19.   Leacock township (Lancaster) 80.66%
20.   Allegheny township (Butler) 80.59%
21.   Anthony township (Lycoming) 80.53%
22.   Lincoln township (Bedford) 80.53%
23.   Penn township (Huntingdon) 80.28%
24.   New Washington borough (Clearfield) 80.00%
25.   West Beaver township (Snyder) 79.90%

McCAIN (towns with 5,000+ votes)
1.   Antrim township (Franklin) 74.56%
2.   Adams township (Butelr) 69.68%
3.   Guilford township (Franklin) 67.56%
4.   Peters township (Washington) 67.06%
5.   Pine township (Allegheny) 66.47%
6.   Penn township (Westmoreland) 66.07%
7.   Greene township (Franklin) 65.87%
8.   Loyalsock township (Lycoming) 64.66%
9.   Murrysville borough (Westmoreland) 63.99%
10.   Cranberry township (Butler) 63.96%
11.   Richland township (Allegheny) 63.94%
12.   Hempfield township (Westmoreland) 62.70%
13.   West Lampeter township (Lancaster) 62.29%
14.   North Huntingdon township (Westmoreland) 62.00%
15.   Washington township (Franklin) 61.46%
16.   Unity township (Westmoreland) 61.45%
17.   Logan township (Blair) 61.30%
18.   Fairview township (York) 61.23%
19.   Newberry township (York) 61.15%
20.   South Middleton township (Cumberland) 61.05%
21.   West Hanover township (Dauphin) 60.68%
22.   Sandy township (Clearfield) 60.63%
23.   Warwick township (Lancaster) 60.38%
24.   Penn township (York) 60.09%
25.   Franklin Park borough (Allegheny) 60.09%
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #37 on: May 27, 2009, 08:23:45 PM »

...and here's the map combined with NE, NY, and NJ. Smiley



Link: http://i686.photobucket.com/albums/vv223/nordstrand87/northeast2008.png
Logged
RI
realisticidealist
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,776


Political Matrix
E: 0.39, S: 2.61

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #38 on: May 27, 2009, 08:30:52 PM »

Beautiful. Smiley
Logged
TeePee4Prez
Flyers2004
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,479


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #39 on: May 27, 2009, 08:56:59 PM »

Great work, Nordstrand. What is the Kerry-McCain township in MontCo that borders Philly?

Living fairly close to there one explanation I have is a fair number of well off white blue collar workers from the city moved there swinging it towards McCain.  It also explains some of the lower Bucks swings.  I'm surprised Lower Moreland even went for Kerry.  It always seemed fairly Catholic and conservative to me whereas Abington/Jenkintown and Upper Moreland/Willow Grove seemed more liberal.  The state Rep in Lower Moreland is a Santorum-esque conservative named Tom Murt who knocked off a socially liberal Republican Sue Cornell in 2006 over the pay raise debacle. 
Logged
Keystone Phil
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 52,607


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #40 on: May 27, 2009, 09:02:34 PM »
« Edited: May 27, 2009, 09:05:12 PM by Keystone Phil »

Great work, Nordstrand. What is the Kerry-McCain township in MontCo that borders Philly?

Living fairly close to there one explanation I have is a fair number of well off white blue collar workers from the city moved there swinging it towards McCain.  It also explains some of the lower Bucks swings.  I'm surprised Lower Moreland even went for Kerry.  It always seemed fairly Catholic and conservative to me whereas Abington/Jenkintown and Upper Moreland/Willow Grove seemed more liberal.  The state Rep in Lower Moreland is a Santorum-esque conservative named Tom Murt who knocked off a socially liberal Republican Sue Cornell in 2006 over the pay raise debacle. 

Agreed with all of the above.

Murt is my man.  Smiley  As you know, he was my write in vote for Congress in 2008. He's awesome. Even though Lower Moreland (a big part of his district) is more conservative, his district is more of a swing/centrist district. Even though I wanted him in the 2006 primary, I thought he was going to lose the General. Hell, I didn't even think he'd win the primary (he ended up winning easily). He won the General easily, too. He was targeted in 2008 as well. He won by an even bigger margin.

I'd love to see him run for the PA 13 seat one day but I think, for the first time since 2004, that I'm actually going to like a candidate in the 13th in 2010. I like one candidate in particular but that's another discussion for another thread...for another day.  Smiley

Let me clarify, though, that Murt is certainly not "Santorum-esque" in his style of engagement. Santorum is polarizing; Murt is not. Santorum is a fierce fighter; Murt is one of the meekest, low key people I've seen in politics.
Logged
TeePee4Prez
Flyers2004
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,479


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #41 on: May 27, 2009, 09:07:25 PM »
« Edited: May 27, 2009, 09:09:01 PM by ICE HOCKEY »

Great work, Nordstrand. What is the Kerry-McCain township in MontCo that borders Philly?

Living fairly close to there one explanation I have is a fair number of well off white blue collar workers from the city moved there swinging it towards McCain.  It also explains some of the lower Bucks swings.  I'm surprised Lower Moreland even went for Kerry.  It always seemed fairly Catholic and conservative to me whereas Abington/Jenkintown and Upper Moreland/Willow Grove seemed more liberal.  The state Rep in Lower Moreland is a Santorum-esque conservative named Tom Murt who knocked off a socially liberal Republican Sue Cornell in 2006 over the pay raise debacle. 

Agreed with all of the above.

Murt is my man.  Smiley  As you know, he was my write in vote for Congress in 2008. He's awesome. Even though Lower Moreland (a big part of his district) is more conservative, his district is more of a swing/centrist district. Even though I wanted him in the 2006 primary, I thought he was going to lose the General. Hell, I didn't even think he'd win the primary (he ended up winning easily). He won the General easily, too. He was targeted in 2008 as well. He won by an even bigger margin.

I'd love to see him run for the PA 13 seat one day but I think, for the first time since 2004, that I'm actually going to like a candidate in the 13th in 2010. I like one candidate in particular but that's another discussion for another thread...for another day.  Smiley

Let me clarify, though, that Murt is certainly not "Santorum-esque" in his style of engagement. Santorum is polarizing; Murt is not. Santorum is a fierce fighter; Murt is one of the meekest, low key people I've seen in politics.

At least ideologically I heard he was in that territory.  I could be wrong.  It seems to me that the extreme Southeast corner of Montco might be the GOP's best hope.  The rest of the county seemed to swing wildly Democratic.
Logged
Keystone Phil
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 52,607


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #42 on: May 27, 2009, 09:08:58 PM »

Great work, Nordstrand. What is the Kerry-McCain township in MontCo that borders Philly?

Living fairly close to there one explanation I have is a fair number of well off white blue collar workers from the city moved there swinging it towards McCain.  It also explains some of the lower Bucks swings.  I'm surprised Lower Moreland even went for Kerry.  It always seemed fairly Catholic and conservative to me whereas Abington/Jenkintown and Upper Moreland/Willow Grove seemed more liberal.  The state Rep in Lower Moreland is a Santorum-esque conservative named Tom Murt who knocked off a socially liberal Republican Sue Cornell in 2006 over the pay raise debacle. 

Agreed with all of the above.

Murt is my man.  Smiley  As you know, he was my write in vote for Congress in 2008. He's awesome. Even though Lower Moreland (a big part of his district) is more conservative, his district is more of a swing/centrist district. Even though I wanted him in the 2006 primary, I thought he was going to lose the General. Hell, I didn't even think he'd win the primary (he ended up winning easily). He won the General easily, too. He was targeted in 2008 as well. He won by an even bigger margin.

I'd love to see him run for the PA 13 seat one day but I think, for the first time since 2004, that I'm actually going to like a candidate in the 13th in 2010. I like one candidate in particular but that's another discussion for another thread...for another day.  Smiley

Let me clarify, though, that Murt is certainly not "Santorum-esque" in his style of engagement. Santorum is polarizing; Murt is not. Santorum is a fierce fighter; Murt is one of the meekest, low key people I've seen in politics.

At least ideologically I heard he was in that territory.  I could be wrong.

I'd say that he's a standard conservative Republican. You'd say that Santorum-esque means far right. I disagree. Either way, Murt isn't far right and his style of engagement is certainly not Santorum-esque.
Logged
nclib
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,304
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #43 on: May 27, 2009, 09:44:48 PM »

Some rankings of municipalities:

BY MARGIN

McCAIN
1.   Hempfield township (Westmoreland) 5,604
2.   Cranberry township (Butler) 4,219
3.   Peters township (Washington) 4,128
4.   North Huntingdon township (Westmoreland) 4,099
5.   Penn township (Westmoreland) 3,602


Am I correct that Hempfield is the largest municipality in PA to vote for McCain? According to Wiki, it has 40K pop., but only because it has a large land area...wow, certainly shows how weak the GOP is in Northern Metro areas.
Logged
Antonio the Sixth
Antonio V
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 58,144
United States


Political Matrix
E: -7.87, S: -3.83

P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #44 on: May 28, 2009, 12:50:32 AM »


Formidable map. Smiley
Logged
minionofmidas
Lewis Trondheim
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 58,206
India


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #45 on: May 28, 2009, 03:24:32 AM »

BY MARGIN (PERCENT)

OBAMA

(...)

Again, mostly places with large or majority black populations. Swarthmore is home to Swarthmore College.

But also this interesting little place. Smiley

Logged
minionofmidas
Lewis Trondheim
Atlas Institution
*****
Posts: 58,206
India


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #46 on: May 28, 2009, 06:54:39 AM »

I'm pretty surprised by Upper Macungie and Lower Macungie, I would have thought those would be strong Republican-territory but they were 49.80%-49.23% and 50.58%-48.45% McCain, respectively. I guess it's the New Yorkers.
I notice the two townships north of that (with the 60ish R shades) are almost as affluent but more thinly populated and lilywhite. (The Macungies seem to be what people usually mean when they use "diverse" as a compliment... quite heavily white but with a few token representatives of every racial minority under the sun).
Logged
Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 40,325
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #47 on: May 28, 2009, 11:19:42 AM »

Some rankings of municipalities:


BY PERCENTAGE

OBAMA
1.   Yeadon borough (Delaware) 95.21%
2.   Chester city (Delaware) 93.23%
3.   Braddock borough (Allegheny) 90.63%
4.   Wilkinsburg borough (Allegheny) 89.74%
5.   Darby borough (Delaware) 89.71%
6.   Chester township (Delaware) 89.64%
7.   Rankin borough (Allegheny) 89.26%
8.   Colwyn borough (Delaware) 87.64%
9.   Homestead borough (Allegheny) 87.59%
10.   Harrisburg city (Dauphin) 86.79%
11.   Farrell city (Mercer) 85.02%
12.   Coatesville city (Chester) 84.59%
13.   South Coatesville borough (Chester) 84.06%
14.   Swarthmore borough (Delaware) 83.27%
15.   Philadelphia city (Philadelphia) 83.01%
16.   Norristown borough (Montgomery) 82.32%
17.   Reading city (Berks) 80.50%
18.   Cheltenham township (Montgomery) 79.98%
19.   Sharon Hill borough (Delaware) 79.71%
20.   Duquesne city (Allegheny) 78.91%
21.   East Lansdowne borough (Delaware) 78.83%
22.   York city (York) 77.35%
23.   Millbourne borough (Delaware) 76.37%
24.   Lansdowne borough (Delaware) 76.13%
25.   Mount Carbon borough (Schuylkill) 76.00%

Have to say I'm a little disappointed (though not entirely surprised) that Pittsburgh didn't wind up on this list. What were the final percentages for Da Burg?

McCAIN (towns with 5,000+ votes)
1.   Antrim township (Franklin) 74.56%
2.   Adams township (Butelr) 69.68%
3.   Guilford township (Franklin) 67.56%
4.   Peters township (Washington) 67.06%
5.   Pine township (Allegheny) 66.47%
6.   Penn township (Westmoreland) 66.07%
7.   Greene township (Franklin) 65.87%
8.   Loyalsock township (Lycoming) 64.66%
9.   Murrysville borough (Westmoreland) 63.99%
10.   Cranberry township (Butler) 63.96%
11.   Richland township (Allegheny) 63.94%
12.   Hempfield township (Westmoreland) 62.70%
13.   West Lampeter township (Lancaster) 62.29%
14.   North Huntingdon township (Westmoreland) 62.00%
15.   Washington township (Franklin) 61.46%
16.   Unity township (Westmoreland) 61.45%
17.   Logan township (Blair) 61.30%
18.   Fairview township (York) 61.23%
19.   Newberry township (York) 61.15%
20.   South Middleton township (Cumberland) 61.05%
21.   West Hanover township (Dauphin) 60.68%
22.   Sandy township (Clearfield) 60.63%
23.   Warwick township (Lancaster) 60.38%
24.   Penn township (York) 60.09%
25.   Franklin Park borough (Allegheny) 60.09%

A little local color here: Franklin Park barely cracking 60% for a GOP presidential candidate, and neighboring McCandless Township not even hitting that is a very good sign for the slowly evolving "MontCo-ization" (i.e. affluent suburbs turning away from the Republicans) of the North Hills.
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #48 on: May 28, 2009, 02:58:04 PM »

Am I correct that Hempfield is the largest municipality in PA to vote for McCain? According to Wiki, it has 40K pop., but only because it has a large land area...wow, certainly shows how weak the GOP is in Northern Metro areas.

The largest municipality to vote for McCain was Altoona, and industrial city in the central part of the state. Keep in mind that Pennsylvania municipalities tend to be small. I don't think McCain did that badly in the Pittsburgh suburbs, most of them he won by at least 10%+ margins although I'm sure they're all trending Democratic. The Philadelphia area, well that's a different story, especially with the change in Chester County. The Lehigh Valley and Reading suburbs McCain did horribly in as well.

These are the most populous McCain places with 2007 populations:
1.       Altoona city (Blair) 47,271 51.58%-46.64%
2.       Hempfield township (Westmoreland) 42,576 62.70%-36.44%
3.       Northampton township (Bucks) 41,448 52.29%-46.94%
4.       Manheim township (Lancaster) 37,586 51.94%46.94%
5.       Bethel Park borough (Allegheny) 35,654 55.25%-43.47%
6.       Ross township (Allegheny) 30,697 52.49%-46.24%
7.       Shaler township (Allegheny) 29,282 54.10%-44.60%
8.       North Huntingdon township (Westmoreland) 29,260 62.00%-37.07%
9.       McCandless township (Allegheny) 28,090 56.91%-42.04%
10.   Cranberry township (Butler) 27,170 63.96%-35.03%
11.   Plum borough (Allegheny) 27,146 56.07%-42.78%
12.   Lower Macungie township (Lehigh) 27,002 50.58%-48.45%
13.   Marple township (Delaware) 26,485 51.09%-48.01%
14.   Hampden township (Cumberland) 26,230 57.08%-41.71%
15.   York township (York) 26,150 55.90%-42.60%
16.   Springettsbury township (York) 24,322 51.37%-47.47%
17.   Springfield township (Delaware) 23,891 51.64%-47.22%
18.   Moon township (Allegheny) 23,777 54.91%-43.92%
19.   Derry township (Dauphin) 21,902 53.67-45.23%
20.   Unity township (Westmoreland) 21,748 61.45%-37.71%
21.   East Hempfield township (Lancaster) 21,704 52.94%-45.92%
22.   Peters township (Washington) 20,919 67.06%-32.13%
23.   Upper St. Clair township (Allegheny) 20,545 58.96%-40.17%
24.   Dover township (York) 19,884 59.23%-39.22%
25.   Penn township (Westmoreland) 19,603 66.07%-33.03%
Logged
Nordstrand
Rookie
**
Posts: 31
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #49 on: May 28, 2009, 03:09:07 PM »


Have to say I'm a little disappointed (though not entirely surprised) that Pittsburgh didn't wind up on this list. What were the final percentages for Da Burg?


Pittsburgh : 75.23%-23.44% Obama.
Logged
Pages: 1 [2] 3  
« previous next »
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.076 seconds with 13 queries.