NC-Civitas: Obama by 4 now (user search)
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  NC-Civitas: Obama by 4 now (search mode)
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Author Topic: NC-Civitas: Obama by 4 now  (Read 1571 times)
Miles
MilesC56
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« on: September 24, 2012, 12:04:51 PM »

Ouch.

Dalton is still probably down though....
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Miles
MilesC56
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« Reply #1 on: September 24, 2012, 04:12:48 PM »
« Edited: September 24, 2012, 04:14:25 PM by MilesC56 »

The interesting thing about NC is how early most of the state votes.  If the race closes in the final weeks, it actually raises the possibility that Obama wins NC on account of the early vote while losing other swing states that traditionally lean more to the left.

Is the early vote really that D-leaning in a state like NC?  Given that early voting will be overwhelmingly white... Romney should win the white vote in NC handily.

Yes, when I make my precinct-level maps, I always notice how much the early vote helps Democrats.

Obama got 56% of the early/absentee votes.
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Miles
MilesC56
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Posts: 19,325
United States


« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2012, 05:10:50 PM »


Is the early vote really that D-leaning in a state like NC?  Given that early voting will be overwhelmingly white... Romney should win the white vote in NC handily.

Yes, when I make my precinct-level maps, I always notice how much the early vote helps Democrats.

Obama got 56% of the early/absentee votes.

You mean nationally?  Or in North Carolina.  I'm just saying in these southern states the early voting skews white - I understand seatown's point about early voting putting him over the top even if he loses whites less-badly in early voting than on election day - I'm just saying that it is hard to believe he would actually get a majority of early voting in a southern state, where most early voting is white, and most whites vote R.

Yes, I was just talking about NC.

For instance, here's Wake County without absentee/early votes:



And here it is with all the votes represented:
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