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PoliGAF 2016 |OT13| For Queen and Country

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NeoXChaos

Member
Ronald Brownstein ‏@RonBrownstein 1m1 minute ago
Among non-college whites in @QuinnipiacPoll HRC is -10 IA, -27 VA, -44 NC, -53 GA.


Ronald Brownstein ‏@RonBrownstein 3m3 minutes ago
Why the Deep South is different: in @QuinnipiacPoll HRC with college+ whites: +12 VA, +4 IA, -2 NC, but still -27 GA

Why is she doing so bad with college educated in the South?
 

Boke1879

Member
36% of 2012 total - how can you call that "low" without the corresponding total from this point in time in 2012? All you can say is that it is "lower" than the current white and Hispanic returns.

Yea I'm not seeing it. I just can't imagine the AA population is just going to sit at home lol.
 
I actually think 538's biggest issue is the writers they've hired. Enten is the only decent one they have in politics.

Some jackass wrote an article about "don't get excited over early voting" using the data from 12 states on a plot to make his point.

One of those states was PA which has no early voting, and another was OR which is primarily a mail in vote state.

I could pick a poligaffer at random and end up with an article less sloppy than that.
 
Still won't get her there before 11:00 EST. She will need NE-2 which will close 2 hours before 11:00 EST at 9:00 EST or GA which will close 4 hours before 11:00 EST at 7:00 EST or Arizona which will close 1 hour before 11:00 EST at 10:00 EST.

*IA and NV close at 10:00 EST

7xve9.png

The west cost is a given we'll know by PA, NC and FL's call
 

kirblar

Member
Why is she doing so bad with college educated in the South?
Being educated doesn't prevent you from being racist.

If people keep their methedology consistent, people won't turn on them. If you appear to be warping your data to feed a narrative and drive clicks....out come the angry emojis.
 

A Human Becoming

More than a Member
Some jackass wrote an article about "don't get excited over early voting" using the data from 12 states on a plot to make his point.

One of those states was PA which has no early voting, and another was OR which is primarily a mail in vote state.

I could pick a poligaffer at random and end up with an article less sloppy than that.
Misrepresenting absentee votes as early voting in Pennsylvania is pretty shitty.
 

NeoXChaos

Member
Jim Siegel
‏@phrontpage
Ohio Senate GOP Caucus raised $3.2M this period. Dem Caucus raised $700K.


Kyle Kondik ‏@kkondik 18m18 minutes ago
Kyle Kondik Retweeted Jim Siegel
There are so few things in life you can count on these days, but the Republicans holding the Ohio Senate (since 1984) is one of them.

stay sucking OH Democratic party.
 

teiresias

Member
Follow up tweet from him is showing low black turn-out in VA as well:

@Redistrict
VA: early vote is at only 36% of '12 total in Newport News, 37% in Norfolk, 37% in Petersburg, 28% in Portsmouth. Low AA enthusiasm.

How does one even quantify or compare this in VA. VA doesn't have early voting we only have absentee voting and you have to provide a reason and employer contact if you're claiming an employment reason for not voting on election day. Seems this means this number would swing from election to election anyway since everyone can't just legally vote early.
 

kirblar

Member
How does one even quantify or compare this in VA. VA doesn't have early voting we only have absentee voting and you have to provide a reason and employer contact if you're claiming an employment reason for not voting on election day. Seems this means this number would swing from election to election anyway since everyone can't just legally vote early.
Fairfax/Loudoun have in-person absentee voting, which is basically the same thing.
 
Ohio is terrible.

They support their governor and portman because Ohio is doing well.

Ohio is doing well because Obama did not let auto industry fail.

Punish Obama.
 
So anything REAL bedwetting today, or just the normal generally good Clinton polls and a few eh ones?

I think the bigger trend is that Republicans are starting to feel less awful about voting for Trump, but that doesn't even come close to fixing his problems and in most Senate races the Republicans were already mostly voting in-line with their candidates already. Maybe Heck is the exception since he disowned Trump after Access Hollywood.

Close Senate races still come down to getting your partisans to the polls.
 

A Human Becoming

More than a Member
So anything REAL bedwetting today, or just the normal generally good Clinton polls and a few eh ones?
There should only ever be bedwetting if you see Trump consistently winning polls in New Hampshire, Colorado, Michigan, Pennsylvania or Wisconsin. As much as we all want to see Hillary to sweep all the swings states and pick up historically solid Republican states like Georgia and Texas, getting 270 is what matters..

The Senate races and what the results mean for 2020 are a different story.
 

Gruco

Banned
As someone who loved Nate in 2012 and 2008, I figure it's worth a quick discussion on why I've soured on him so much this cycle. I think a lot of people adopt a sort of natural reaction of "he just isn't pro Hillary enough that's why GAF hates him", but the guy has been more or less a disaster ever since he left the Times, and I've hated the new 538 long before we headed into the general.

I do want to say though that I think Silver deserves a lot of credit. He popularized out of sample demographic regressions and poll averaging and brought a lot of rigor to election prognostication which wasn't there before. It's hard to overstate how astonishingly shitty election analysis was in 2004. Silver upped everyone's game. His biggest problem is that he's no longer competing in the same pundit environment as 2008. That, and his fickle contrarian streak has been hurting him. His competitors are just much better than him at this point, and Silver hasn't been able to keep up.

The first red flags were in the run up to the launch of 538, where Silver aspired to discuss economics and education and god knows what else in addition to sports and politics. Of course, Silver was successful in politics and sports because he had much better data skills than the average sports writer or political hack. Somehow, success there convinced him that as someone with no advanced degrees, he could move into turf held by people who've dedicated their careers to quantitative causal analysis and enjoy a similar disruption. It was a disastrous plan from the word go, and the launch of 538 and wealth of insipid econ articles confirmed it.

Making matter worse is that rather than take the criticism and work to up his game, he picked petty, stupid, self-defeating fights with Krugman and the Times. And from there it just kept getting worse.

Trump was another disaster. I don't blame Silver for not calling Trump right away, or for relying on an endorsement model which didn't work out. Trump was, after all, strange. But, Silver got a lot of justified criticism for being aggressively defensive, adopting a lot of lazy, superficial defenses, and for just refusing to think critically about the election for a solid 6-8 months. His go to defense was an allusion to Herman Cain which was just a silly comparison on any level. He never engaged in serious thought about the size or persistence of Trump's lead, Trump's geographical strength, the trendlines of his favorables, or polling which accurately predicted that there was never going to be some kind of magical anti-Trump consolidation. Silver was just completely non-serious about the election for months, and repeatedly got antagonistic and more stubborn about it as his position became more untenable.

As far as the general this year, I think the nowcast is transparent click-bait, and I think that Silver's writing is motivated by contrarianism in a way that's unhelpful to anyone. Just this week, Wolfers politely asked him to explain some anomolous results and Silver's only reaction was to call him lazy and pick a fight.

A lot of people have pointed out in this thread that the model does weird stuff sometimes. And sure, it does. But I mean, whatever. That in and of itself isn't the problem. The problem is that poll averaging is actually quite easy, he's competing with more academics than he used to, and he simply doesn't have the training or background to add value to the discussion any more. Reviewing that discussion of the assumptions going into his model is just painful, because the reality is that none of these things even have to be assumed - all of those points can be structurally identified by the data. But, his model is an outlier and it does weird things because while Silver legit doesn't know how to make it better, but he still has to do something, because his original contributions are no longer special or interesting. Election coverage has internalized the main points and moved on.

Like I said, Silver was a big, big deal in 2008 and belongs in the political writing hall of fame, because he really changed the game. But, it's not the same game any more. He's not a great editor(nor does he have one), he never went to grad school, and the game he created has left him behind. Such is life - these things happen. But he's not content to be left behind, so rather than continue as one part of a larger discussion and search for a new contribution, he just picks shitty fights on twitter and spends most his time looking like an idiot.

I guess another way of saying all of this is that ESPN was a mistake. As the electoral-vote dude pointed out, when you're part of an academic or news-gathering ecosystem, there's a certain amount of space that comes with the territory that helps. Silver doesn't have that, he needs it, and it shows. It has been a long, ugly fall for him.
 
I'm am so much less stressed right now than at the same points in time for 2008 and 2012.

In fact, some of the early voting stats listed have had me full mast at times. Hopium does that
 
Wait, this tweet is all sorts of wrong isnt it? Poligaf been crunching numbers for the past week, and only Iowa looked like a Trump stronghold

Bradd Jaffy‏ @BraddJaffy
DEM voters outpacing GOP in CO, IA, MI, NC, NV, OH, VA, WI

GOP voters outpacing DEM in AZ, GA, PA

Even split in FL
Bradd Jaffy‏ @BraddJaffy
As of today, 13,748,638 votes have been cast in the presidential election; 7,541,120 in 12 battleground states, per NBC data analysis
 
@tbonier
FL: 21% of Dem EVs who didn't vote in '12 are Hispanic, compared to 11% of Dem EVs who did vote in '12. Points to motivated Hispanic base.

oh my.

Wait, this tweet is all sorts of wrong isnt it? Poligaf been crunching numbers for the past week, and only Iowa looked like a Trump stronghold

It's not wrong, just misleading. Dems are up still in Iowa, but down compared to 2012 (GOP is down as much, but not as much). PA has no early voting, just absentee voting, and very little of it, so using those comparisons is dumb dumb dumb.
 
Wait, this tweet is all sorts of wrong isnt it? Poligaf been crunching numbers for the past week, and only Iowa looked like a Trump stronghold

No that is right. I think we have been talking about compared to 2012 in a lot of cases, but this is referring to raw totals so far in 2016.
 
Wait, this tweet is all sorts of wrong isnt it? Poligaf been crunching numbers for the past week, and only Iowa looked like a Trump stronghold

Most people are relating these numbers to 2012 since it gives you an idea of how the final tally will compare to last time around. This appears to be an absolute comparison, which gives no insight and basically should be responded with "No shit, Sherlock".
 

teiresias

Member
Fairfax/Loudoun have in-person absentee voting, which is basically the same thing.

As far as I know the whole state has in person absentee, but it's still absentee and not early voting so you can't just show up to vote early just because you want to vote early.
 
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