Posted on 06/19/2012 5:33:00 PM PDT by randita
Swing States, Battlegrounds and the 2012 Map
Stuart Rothenberg June 19, 2012 · 3:37 PM EDT
Everyone has an opinion about swing states. I figured it was time to explain how I see the presidential map.
My approach isnt based solely on statistics, though numbers matter a great deal. (I suppose this means that while I admire Oakland As general manager Billy Beanes approach to baseball, I also think that non-quantifiable considerations are part of the analytical mix.)
When I use the term swing states, I am referring to those states that in a neutral landscape are likely to be the closest and could well swing to one party or the other.
Because they perform at or near the national margin, they give a good indication of the partisan direction of the cycle.
For my money, its meaningless to talk about presidential swing states in an electoral blowout, such as 1964 or 1972. I dont care which state gives the winner his 270th electoral vote if the race isnt close, though I can see why others would.
In trying to select this years swing states, I dont put much emphasis on the 2008 results. That was a wave election in which many states performed atypically.
Democrat Barack Obama ran so strongly nationally that he carried Indiana and North Carolina, states that simply dont pass the swing state smell test without the 2008 results. Of course, we have to consider the possibility that some states that behave unusually in any given election are doing so because they are in the middle of a fundamental partisan shift, but the 2008 election results alone dont prove that.
Unlike many, I regard swing states and battleground states as two different categories.
For me, battleground states are those that dont qualify as swing states but are potentially competitive. That usually means that the presidential campaigns spend resources there.
I see eight swing states: New Hampshire, Virginia, Florida, Ohio, Iowa, Wisconsin, Colorado and Nevada. And I see five battleground states: North Carolina, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Minnesota. Im not entirely comfortable with Michigan and Minnesota being on the list, but they dont belong in the same category as Connecticut and Maryland, either.
Most of the swing states are an easy call. Iowa, for example, went narrowly for Al Gore in 2000 and narrowly for George W. Bush four years later. Obama carried it by 9.5 points, a little more than a couple of points over his national margin of 7.2 points. New Hampshire flipped from a narrow Bush state in 2000 to one narrowly carried by Sen. John Kerry, a New Englander, in 2004. Both times the outcome in the Granite State was close.
Florida was a tie in 2000 but went for Bush by 5 points about twice that of his national margin in 2004. Obamas margin in the state, less than 3 points, shows the Sunshine States GOP tilt, making it likely to swing back to presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney in a close election. Still, Florida is competitive enough to fall into the swing state category.
Ohio usually has a Republican tinge but is always close when the national contest is tight. Nevada, where Bushs 2.6-point victory in 04 almost mirrored his 2.4-point national margin, is much like Ohio, though with a growing Hispanic population that should benefit Democrats.
That leaves Virginia, Colorado and Wisconsin, along with the battleground states. Bushs margins in Virginia in 2000 and 2004 were slightly more than 8 points, much better than his national showing each time. Four years ago, Obama carried the state by just more than 6 points, about a point less than his national margin.
Its possible that weve all been exaggerating Virginias competitiveness and that it will perform 3 points to 5 points more Republican than the nation as a whole. Still, the growth of the Washington, D.C., suburbs, which are less conservative and more politically competitive than Old Virginia, suggests that the Old Dominion belongs on any list of competitive states.
The story is about the same in Colorado. It mirrored Bushs Virginia showing in 2000 but was more Democratic than Virginia in 2004 (though Bush carried it as well), and even more Democratic in 2008.
In fact, Obamas margin in Colorado, 9 points, was greater than his national margin of just more than 7 points. The growing importance of Hispanics in the state also cant be overlooked.
Wisconsin is perhaps the most misunderstood state in the nation.
Obama won it by almost 14 points last time, a huge margin considering the size of his national win. That result, and the fact that the Badger State hasnt gone Republican since 1984, apparently has led many to ignore the closeness of the 00 and 04 contests. Gores two-tenths of 1 percent margin was a hair under his national showing (he beat Bush in the popular vote by about a half a percentage point) and Kerrys four-tenths of 1 percent victory made it, in percentage terms, the single closest state in the country.
While exit polling during the recent gubernatorial recall election shows the president with a comfortable advantage, his lead is likely to evaporate if the economy continues to slow. That fact, plus the states fundamentals (including the importance of working-class white voters) suggests an extremely close presidential race if the national race is also very close.
When I am asked whether Wisconsin is on the road to becoming a swing state, I answer no because it already is one.
Of the five battleground states, only New Mexico has consistently produced close contests for the presidency. Like Iowa, New Mexico swung from Gore in 2000 to Bush in 2004. Four years later, it went for Obama by an overwhelming 15 points.
But Bush was unusually strong among Hispanics, so his showing in 2000 and 2004 could be misleading. And the GOPs problems with the growing Hispanic vote probably give Democrats more fundamental strength in the state. Given all of that, New Mexico doesnt belong with the swing states but is probably worth watching.
North Carolina and Pennsylvania certainly havent performed as swing states. Obama won the Tar Heel State by three-tenths of a point while winning by more than 7 points nationally. And because the Democratic presidential nominees lost the state by more than a dozen points in 2000 and 2004, its difficult to believe that state changed so dramatically and fundamentally to make it a swing state.
Of course, both parties have advertised there, and Democrats certainly would like to expand the playing field by putting North Carolina, the site of the partys national convention in September, into play. So its worth watching.
The same goes for Pennsylvania, which hasnt gone Republican in a presidential contest since 1988. Still, its usually close enough recent Democratic nominees generally did about 4 points better in the Keystone State than they did nationally to pay attention to it.
In addition, the presidents problems with working-class whites and older voters combine to make Pennsylvania more interesting than usual.
Presidential margins in 2000 and 2004 in both Michigan and Minnesota arent all that different from those in Pennsylvania, and both of those states in the upper Midwest could see some action as Republicans seek to add normally Democratic-leaning states to the playing field. But if Obama is running even or very close in those states, he probably has bigger problems in true swing states.
Interesting read.
Thanks for explaining that. I always thought it meant states where lots of wife swapping goes on.
I’ve read this. IMHO, the states that will decide the election are New Hampshire, Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa, Colorado, and Nevada.
You’re leaving off VA? I’m not quite as confident about VA as you are, I guess.
If I had to pick 3 states that will decide the election, I would say OH, VA and FL. (I think NC is pretty much in his column already.) If Romney wins those three states, he will get to 270 by picking off just one more state. I think that he’ll win NH and seal the deal, but if not there are a half dozen other states that he has about even odds of winning (IA, NV, CO, WI, MI and PA). Romney also has a shot at MN, NM, OR, NJ and ME, but if he wins any of those ít will surely be gravy (if he wins MN he would also carry IA and WI; if he wins NM he’ll carry CO and NV; if he wins NJ he’ll definitely carry PA, if he wins ME he’ll carry NH handily, and if he wins OR, he’ll get to 370 EVs).
You’re leaving off VA? I’m not quite as confident about VA as you are, I guess.
If I had to pick 3 states that will decide the election, I would say OH, VA and FL. (I think NC is pretty much in his column already.) If Romney wins those three states, he will get to 270 by picking off just one more state. I think that he’ll win NH and seal the deal, but if not there are a half dozen other states that he has about even odds of winning (IA, NV, CO, WI, MI and PA). Romney also has a shot at MN, NM, OR, NJ and ME, but if he wins any of those ít will surely be gravy (if he wins MN he would also carry IA and WI; if he wins NM he’ll carry CO and NV; if he wins NJ he’ll definitely carry PA, if he wins ME he’ll carry NH handily, and if he wins OR, he’ll get to 370 EVs).
I can’t poke holes in Rothenberg’s analysis at this stage of the game.
The holes big enough to drive a truck through!?
If anyone here thinks that Obama is taking Florida, a state with total GOP control & hard hit by obamian policies including the devastation of the Space Program, well I really do have swamp land to sell you.
2012 bump
My mistake, I forgot Virginia. Choosing Bob McDonnell would surely help Romney there.
The Democratic candidate has a lock on the mega-states: Obama can be confident of carrying CA, IL and NY. He doesn’t have to spend any time there and the GOP won’t bother trying to pick up those states.
Which means for Romney, carrying OH is a must and has to carry FL. TX is a GOP lock and the Democrats are not going to spend any time there for the same reason Republicans don’t open a campaign office in CA and NY.
I’m sorry,
I figure that at this point, any state that hasn’t decided it’s against Obama is a lost cause. Swing state?...give me a break!..
Rothenberg is a lib but this is a very fair analysis. The wild card, of course, is the economy. If it continues to tank, I can’t imagine Obama being re-elected even with vote fraud factored in. However, if it bounces back in the fall, I think he’ll hold on and we’ll be screwed.
I’ve been a broken record about how I don’t think Osama can win NC again no matter how close some poll is.
And Arizona too which RCP has a “tossup” and a new PPP poll has close (Senate race too). Not gonna happen.
After 2000 I’d never say I was sure of Florida (a must win with 29 votes) but I think Romney will win that in end. Of the “big 3” I’m most confident there.
I’m worried about OH and VA. VA might have the Virgil Goode factor opening the door to Obama winning with 48-49%.
It’s likely Glove will grab at least one of IA, NH, CO, WI, NV that he needs to go over the top (NH and IA are most likely) so I think the big three are the ball game. If he misses either VA or OH he’d need to win at least 3 of those 5 smaller states, all 5 if were to miss both or win them both but miss Florida.
It’s hard to imagine PA or MI going GOP if OH doesn’t so they would be the icing (or possibly the cake if Florida is not secured).
Professor LS, how is Ohio looking this year?
Polling here has been absent in last month. Previous polls were close, with Mitt up in last I saw. But a good indicator are the Josh Mandel/Sherrod Brown polls, which show Brown up 6-—but in mid-40s-—over an unknown opponent who has cut the lead in half in 2 months. So I’m guardedly optimistic.
Go Josh go!!!
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