General Election Polls: Who Does Better Against McCain State by State?
News from the VotemasterTomorrow is the West Virginia primary. Here is the lay of the land. West Virginia gets to send 39 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, as follows:
All people registered as Democrats or not registered with any party may vote. Republicans may not vote in the Democratic primary. Voting is by congressional district, of which West Virginia has three. Here is the map.
West Virginia is a state tailor-made for Hillary Clinton. There are no rich people, no creative types, few blacks, and few liberals. There are a lot of relatively poor people and some blue-collar workers. The state ranks last in the nation in median household income and has the lowest percentage of the population with a college degree of any state in the country. Only two cities (Charleston and Huntington have 50,000 people and only six cities have 20,000 people or more. The popular image of the state of one being full of poor hillbillies living in mountain cabins unfortunately has a certain amount of truth to it. As a consequence of these demographics, Hillary Clinton is expected to do very well in West Virginia. Getting 2/3 of the vote is plausible. If she does get this in each of the state's three congressional districts, she gets 4 district-level delegates per CD, for a total of 12 to his 6. With 2/3 of the vote, she will get 5 at-large delegates to his 2 and 2 PLEOs to his 1. Thus she is likely to win 19 pledged delegates to his 9 for a net gain of 10 delegates. Next week Kentucky votes and Oregon (which has only mail-in votes) will finish voting. They are likely to cancel each other out. Barack Obama has said if his association with Rev. Jeremiah Wright is on the table, then John McCain's association with Charles Keating is too. Executive summary: Keating was a crooked banker who bilked thousands of people out of their life savings. When the feds caught up with him, he made large campaign contributions to McCain and four other senators, who then promptly tried (unsuccessfully) to keep him out of federal prison. Of course all that was 20 years ago, but Obama is going to argue if my association with unsavory people 20 years ago is an issue, then so is yours. Two potential Democrats who might be interested in Fossella's seat in Congress are state senator Diane Savino and Brooklyn Burrough president Marty Markowitz (if you don't know who Fossella is, check the postings here for last couple of days. In the unlikely event Fossella refuses to step down and runs again, the GOP may be in even worse shape than with state senator Andy Lanza or DA Dan Donovan, the most likely Republicans if Fossella resigns. It is even possible that the Republican leadership would encourage Lanza or Donovan to run against Fossella in a primary if he refused to go quietly. A new political satire site, Politicalirony now serves up politicans on wry. The polling results for all primaries and caucuses are available as a Web page and in .csv format. Barack Obama's lead in the delegate race is now at 167 compared to 136 one week ago. Almost every day he nets a couple more. Delegates
Needed to win: 2025 Here is another source for delegate totals. -- The Votemaster |