RJ's 2012 Presidential Election Predictions - Page 2

Part of: Election 2012

Minnesota - 10

Minnesota has not gone for a Republican since Richard Nixon's landslide reelection in 1972. But remember that George W. Bush came within three points of winning the state in 2004, and recent polls have shown a definite tightening in the race. In fact, one poll taken in late October showed Romney leading by a point. However that polling firm is known to have a Republican bias, and that was the only poll this year showing Romney ahead. Obama will win it. (Obama by 5%)

Michigan - 16

Michigan is the state where Mitt Romney and his wife Ann were born, and where Mitt's father was a popular governor in the 1960s. Several polls over the summer showed Romney slightly ahead here, but since late August only a single polling firm (Foster McCollum White Baydoun) has shown Romney tied or ahead. The rest show Obama with a small lead. Obama should win here. (Obama by 4%)

North Carolina - 15

Obama won this state by less than half a percent in 2008, but Democrats must have believed they had a real shot to win it again seeing as how they decided to hold the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte. Unfortunately for them, Obama has not held a lead in the state since a SurveyUSA poll taken in late September/early October. Public Policy Polling (PPP) keeps showing the race a tie, but they are not, shall we say, the most credible polling firm out there. Most other pollsters show Romney leading by between five and eight points. (Romney by 7%)

Florida - 29

An absolute must-win state for Romney. Luckily for him, he looks likely to win it. Since early October, the vast majority of polls taken in the state (18 of 25) show Romney ahead, several with leads of five percent or more. Of the six polls showing Obama ahead, five of them are by a single point and the other one is by just two points. And two of those polls are by PPP. One poll shows a tie. Obama is not above 50% in any of the 25 polls. He won't be winning the Sunshine State this time around. (Romney by 4%)

New Hampshire - 4

Polls throughout mid and late 2011 showed Romney beating Obama here, by as much as 11%. Then Obama was in the lead for most of 2012, and one poll in late September showed him leading Romney by 15 points. But after Romney clobbered Obama in the first presidential debate, things changed almost instantly. Romney was ahead or tied in six of eight polls taken in the state between October 9th and October 23rd. Since then, though, Romney has not led in a single poll. But the three most recent polls (all from this month) show Romney down by 2, down by 1, and tied. None of those polls have Obama above 50%. The poll showing the two percent Obama lead is PPP, so you can pretty much discard that one. Basically, this state is tied.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2 — Page 3Page 4Page 5Page 6

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for rj-elliott

Article Author: RJ Elliott

RJ Elliott is a three-time graduate of the University of Central Florida. His passions in life are sports, politics, and nature. He dislikes daytime television, anti-American dictators, and people who talk like Garrison Keillor. …

Visit RJ Elliott's author pageRJ Elliott's Blog

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own

Article comments

— go to most recent comments
  • 1 - Dan(Miller)

    Nov 05, 2012 at 7:05 am

    A good article and I like the conclusion that Governor Romney will win, even narrowly. However, to the extent that the conclusion relies on opinion polls, they have many inherent problems and reliance may be misplaced.

  • 2 - Christopher Rose

    Nov 05, 2012 at 7:09 am

    Given that Romney is a proven liar that even betrayed his own father in law, I really hope he doesn't embarrass the USA by winning.

  • 3 - Dr Dreadful

    Nov 05, 2012 at 7:33 am

    I see you've learned your lesson from four years ago, RJ, and this time around you're being much more realistic. (Well, at any rate, more realistic than the guy who wrote the blog article I still cherish from mid-2008 explaining in minute detail how Ron Paul was going to sweep into the White House by a landslide.)

    I think you've called most of the battleground states correctly, including Florida. However, wishful thinking does make for an inherently unsound analysis. Romney is not going to win New Hampshire, although that probably isn't going to make much of a difference. As you say, it all comes down to Ohio, and there I'm afraid it doesn't look good for Rombles. He's led in only five of over 40 polls taken since the beginning of last month. I can buy some polls being out of whack, but not the majority of them.

    People do, of course, change their minds, but with recent events in the northeast in mind I feel that change is going to tend to be in the President's favour.

  • 4 - Josh

    Nov 05, 2012 at 8:05 am

    Great article. I hope you're right.

  • 5 - Baronius

    Nov 05, 2012 at 9:45 am

    Any guesses on when we find out who won? If Ohio is close, the absentee and provisional ballots will be an issue. And neither of these guys seems like an early conceder to me.

  • 6 - Nabber

    Nov 05, 2012 at 9:50 am

    I buy it all, except Wisconsin--you don't cite any analysis about the Independents as you did with the others. I find it hard to accept that Romney won't equal Walker's success. The state is in the process of going red.

  • 7 - Dr Dreadful

    Nov 05, 2012 at 10:06 am

    Baronius, gathering together all of the absentee and mail-in ballots is probably going to take a while (2000 all over again, anyone?), but if Obama carries any one of Florida, Virginia or North Carolina (not that I think that's likely), Ohio won't even be an issue.

  • 8 - Patchy

    Nov 05, 2012 at 10:20 am

    It's interesting to see the denial take hold on the left as evidenced by the repetitive 'Romney's a liar' refrain that is/was the last-gasp slogan of the Obama campaign and its true believers.

    The 'liar' charge comes courtesy of, at worst, shifting positions during a long campaign but that hardly makes Romney unique among politicians. In fact, when Clinton did it we were told it was an art form. For some odd reason, the incumbent's supporters don't want to talk about the incumbent - and especially his subordinates - peddling falsehoods even in the most dire circumstances i.e. dead Americans.

  • 9 - Glenn Contrarian

    Nov 05, 2012 at 10:28 am

    What causes me to bite my nails, so to speak, is the level of voter suppression and apparent voting machine tampering - especially in Ohio but elsewhere as well (see here), all of it in such a way that would benefit the Republicans. And what frustrates me no end is that the oh-so-patriotic Republicans seem to have no problem at all with tampering with elections, as long as the tampering benefits them. Such grand hypocrisy!

  • 10 - RJ

    Nov 05, 2012 at 11:31 am

    Ugh. The total electoral college vote should read 285 for Romney, not 283. Is there any way an editor could go in and fix that?

  • 11 - George

    Nov 05, 2012 at 12:11 pm

    Great analysis, but nerve-wracking. It all comes down to Ohio, and Romney wins by "less than 1%". I don't know if I could take that kind of suspense. Uggh. . .

  • 12 - Ron

    Nov 05, 2012 at 12:26 pm

    The saddest thing is that we can vote out the traitorous leadership, but what can we do about the 49% of the people that actually like what Obama's administration has done to our Republic? You can't fix stupid.

  • 13 - UCFan79

    Nov 05, 2012 at 12:31 pm

    As an Ohioan, I accept that Ohio will go Romney but for different reasons:

    1. The war on coal has turned eastern counties, normally democratic, into more likely voters for Romney. Coal and coal power are the source of too many jobs in those counties. In short, the state is so finely balanced between big city democratic support and urban/exurban/rural republican support that any upset in that apple cart will tilt the election. That upset cart will fall in Romney's direction.

    2. The repubs own the machinery of the state government: governor, treasurer, attorney general, secretary of state, house, senate, supreme court. With the sec of state being the office that conducts elections, the chances of fraud are limited. With the governor and atty general having the prerogative to prosecute any fraud, the tilt is again toward the republicans. With the supremes being the near final deciders of any contest, the tilt is republican.

    Final analysis....Ohio goes to Romney

  • 14 - Christopher Rose

    Nov 05, 2012 at 12:42 pm

    Re #12. it is far sadder that someone expects to be taken seriously when writing complete and utter drivel. Far too many Americans really need to grow up, sober up or both...

  • 15 - Ron

    Nov 05, 2012 at 12:47 pm

    Re #14. "If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen." - Samuel Adams

  • 16 - Dan(Miller)

    Nov 05, 2012 at 1:02 pm

    Re #s 2 and 14. To quote and turn back to it's author # 14,

    it is far sadder that someone expects to be taken seriously when writing complete and utter drivel. Far too many Americans really need to grow up, sober up or both...

    So, perhaps, do some who watch from afar. How, by the way, is Sunny Spain doing these days? Booming economy and tranquility for all, I suppose.

    We should all praise the author of #s 2 and 14 for his great example of "complete and utter drivel." Three Cheers!

  • 17 - Costello

    Nov 05, 2012 at 1:07 pm

    Why should we take aeriously the predictions of author who only picks Repubs and doesn't know how to get an article corrected after eight years? No one with any sense thought McCain was going to win in the last few weeks.

  • 18 - Carlo3b

    Nov 05, 2012 at 1:51 pm

    I agree with most of his opinions, except, I believe Wisconsin is Romney, and Minnesota - 10, is a toss-up, advantage Obama, but by a whisker, if he does..

  • 19 - Christopher Rose

    Nov 05, 2012 at 5:20 pm

    Ron, spewing random and irrelevant quotes does nothing to strengthen your "argument".

    Dan, it's sad to see you succumbing to the political partisan hysteria and marking atypically silly remarks. Hopefully when this obscenely expensive election is over sense will replace sensibility.

  • 20 - Christopher Rose

    Nov 05, 2012 at 5:35 pm

    However, to treat your sneering question with more respect than it deserves, apart from some typically boisterous mass demonstrations of political views, all part of the normal democratic process, by and large life in Spain, where I have happily been for the best part of three months now and will regret leaving next month, goes on much the same as it always has.

  • 21 - Dan

    Nov 05, 2012 at 6:06 pm

    Pretty convincing research RJ.

    I tend to agree with a previous commenter that Wisconsin is slightly more likely to fall Romney's way. for the reasons you gave except with more enthusiasm.

    The early vote counts by party in Ohio is the best of the story so far. flipped from four years ago.

    I want to go on record as saying that biased oversampling of Dems really means a solid Romney win. No landslide, but enough to be a surprise.

  • 22 - Frivolous D

    Nov 05, 2012 at 6:20 pm

    I already made my prediction here.

    That said, it'll be a nail-biter for all of us. I think Florida is Romney's with Virginia & Colorado bouncing blue and red so much that it's anyone's call.

    The polls (skewed) are clearly breaking for Obama in NV, Iowa, MN, Ohio, WI & NH.

    I'm giving this one to Obama with something between 281-303 e.v.

    Contrarian, I share your anxiety about the many mitigating influences. Since I'm giving Romney FL anyway, Ohio is the state to watch. Maybe we can get some foreign observers for 2016.

  • 23 - Dr Dreadful

    Nov 05, 2012 at 6:29 pm

    For a bit of perspective, Nate Silver - the NYT's poll stats wonk whose analyses are automatically disregarded by most GOP fans because they don't predict a Romney win - had this to say about the possibility of bias. (It is to be stressed that he's talking about statistical, not human, bias.)

    What it basically boils down to is that the race has reached the stage where the only chance Romney has of winning is if the polls are systematically biased in his opponent's favour.

  • 24 - Frivolous D

    Nov 05, 2012 at 6:42 pm

    Silver just bumped Obama's chances to 91.4%

    No need to opine here. By Wed. morning he'll either be hailed a genius or charlatan.

  • 25 - Dan

    Nov 05, 2012 at 7:34 pm

    A 91% favorite is the rough equivalent of a 14 point favorite in an NFL game. I think it's safe to say Silver is an outlyer.

    Calling Obama at 91% would have been too high in 2008 considering the margin of win. Certainly there is more enthusiasm for Repubs this time.

    Don't know for sure of course, but recurrent oversampling of dems by 6 to 11% in virtually all polls sounds like a possible systematic bias.

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for May 21, 2013

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for April

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs