Same here. I basically agree with everything she has to say. Very common sense. Not a career politician. For some reason the people of AZ don't like her. Doesn't make a lot of sense.sanangelo said:Other than the meme attacks on Kari Lake, what in reality makes Kari Lake a bad candidate? I actually like her a lot.tremble said:
Too bad they put up Lake for that seat.
this was an argument I had with someone a few weeks ago in the difference between public and private pollsAtticusMatlock said:
Saw something on the Vance podcast with Theo Vonn that I'm not sure it's been discussed here, but maybe it has.
One of the things Vance pointed out was that these polls usually cost somewhere around $10,000 or so, but they always have trouble getting responses. 10 or 15 years ago, 1 in 10 people would respond to the polling opportunity. Now it's less than 1 in 30.
The internal pollsers hired by the campaigns generally spend $70,000 or more to conduct one poll because they have to spend so much time calling so many people to get an appropriate set. These generally are the most accurate.
Trump campaign memo:
— Tim Murtaugh (@TimMurtaugh) October 28, 2024
“The biggest and most important turnout day for the Harris campaign during North Carolina and Georgia early voting has come and gone with minimal impact on the electorate.” pic.twitter.com/kTxzNg8bL2
This is my first cycle as an adult not actively working campaigns, so I am building spreadsheets as an outlet for my nervous energy.SwigAg11 said:
Holy spreadsheets Batman!
#FLEV 10/28 pm. The day hasn't ended but R lead is now at 580k, resuming the weekday growth rate (slope on the graph). It's expected to be around 1M by E-eve. Trump wins FL by 15 pts or more! pic.twitter.com/Lm3J0O6ZQ7
— au ng (@athein1) October 28, 2024
Captn_Ag05 said:
I did a bit of a deep dive on Texas data, and deep red and rural counties are turning out early and in larger numbers than the rest of the state. The average turnout as of the end of the weekend was 29.33%. The top 20 counties in turnout % are all deep red counties (voted for Trump in 2020 with over 55% of the vote).
In fact of the top 100 counties with highest turnout, 96 are red counties and four are purple counties (Denton which was Trump plus 8 in 2020, Williamson which was Biden plus 2 in 2020, Collin which was Trump plus 4 in 2020, and Hays, which was Biden plus 9). Not a single true blue county cracked the top 100 in turnout %.
The only blue county with higher than average turnout is Travis, which comes in at 126th highest turnout rate.
Trailing behind the statewide average of 29.33% are the rest of the large blues - Harris (27.07%), Bexar (25.78%), Dallas (25.44%) and El Paso (19.74%).
I am not worried about Texas or Florida. But what happens in those states and the enthusiasm from voters is not something that happens in a vacuum. If your rural voters are enthused and urban voters are not turning out in Texas, that is likely to be the case in other states as well.billydean05 said:
Everybody say it with me now...Texas and Florida president and senate race are not in play. D's have not been showing up throughout early voting and are not at all enthused with Kamala. Hispanic vote nationally is going to be close to even.
Oh I agree completely and we have evidence of this happening throughout the US battleground states and Strong democrat states and strong Republican states and less strong democrat states.Captn_Ag05 said:I am not worried about Texas or Florida. But what happens in those states and the enthusiasm from voters is not something that happens in a vacuum. If your rural voters are enthused and urban voters are not turning out in Texas, that is likely to be the case in other states as well.billydean05 said:
Everybody say it with me now...Texas and Florida president and senate race are not in play. D's have not been showing up throughout early voting and are not at all enthused with Kamala. Hispanic vote nationally is going to be close to even.
I recommend Corinth City Hall. No line. Just walk right in.akm91 said:
Yep, wife and I will add 2 more to the R tally in Denton tomorrow.
aezmvp said:
The key update will be tomorrow night. If by then the trend hasn't changed and when the SOS in the various states get caught up on weekend, Monday and Tuesday counts then we'll know. I expect AZ, GA and NV will be fully out of reach with a normal election day. NC will be close-ish to the same. I'll bet we see the rip cords pulled and everything dumped into WI, NH, MI, and PA. It will suck up every available resource and it will be very late in the day for that. It will give them 24 hours to redeploy those assets and they'll be left with 4 days to try and shift the election in those states. If they've lost in a place like VA or NM, there isn't a path for Democrats IMHO so I think they'll think back to Hillary and flood those zones and especially Philly, Milwaukee, Madison, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Lancaster. This takes time and maybe they've thought through a plan as to how to allocate those resources but my guess is WI and NH won't.
If the GOP really is up in the Sunbelt and won't be caught in NC, GA, NV and AZ then the Dems have to hold EVERYTHING and that is a talllllll order.
Definitely does not appear to be the case in Nevada or Pennsylvania or Florida.Tramp96 said:aezmvp said:
The key update will be tomorrow night. If by then the trend hasn't changed and when the SOS in the various states get caught up on weekend, Monday and Tuesday counts then we'll know. I expect AZ, GA and NV will be fully out of reach with a normal election day. NC will be close-ish to the same. I'll bet we see the rip cords pulled and everything dumped into WI, NH, MI, and PA. It will suck up every available resource and it will be very late in the day for that. It will give them 24 hours to redeploy those assets and they'll be left with 4 days to try and shift the election in those states. If they've lost in a place like VA or NM, there isn't a path for Democrats IMHO so I think they'll think back to Hillary and flood those zones and especially Philly, Milwaukee, Madison, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Lancaster. This takes time and maybe they've thought through a plan as to how to allocate those resources but my guess is WI and NH won't.
If the GOP really is up in the Sunbelt and won't be caught in NC, GA, NV and AZ then the Dems have to hold EVERYTHING and that is a talllllll order.
The unknown variable is the mail-in ballots, though.
I have a sneaky suspicion the Dems are loading up on those heavy this year, even more so than 2020, because it can completely turn the tables on what appears to be initial Republican insurmountable leads.
National Early Vote Update: Party ID Edition
— CA ET Nerd (@earlyvotedata) October 28, 2024
Topline shock number: Ds only lead Rs by 830,075 NATIONALLY (by states that report party ID).
If you have followed this thread, then you are aware of the patterns I have been discussing. I should say I am not surprised but honestly… https://t.co/nKvtRQuQOa pic.twitter.com/Hb4TSvEUYZ
I misread that it was R+12.9 in 2020 not FROM 2020 and I was so confused 🤣
— Alex Speaks Facts (@AlexSpeaksFacts) October 29, 2024
So to be clear for anyone confused like me:
Final early voting in FL was D+1.3 and now it’s R+11.6 for a difference of 12.9 in favor of R
#FLEV 10/28 pm II. The day ended with R lead expanding to 594k, resuming the weekday growth rate (slope on the graph). It's expected to be around 1M by E-eve. Trump wins FL by 15+ pts! pic.twitter.com/mMs31YuFRT
— au ng (@athein1) October 29, 2024
🚨Just in: Michigan ballot returns have shown Republicans with the momentum. Counties that are GOP strongholds have seen a 41.7% surge in new returns over just 3 days. This pushes their total return rate to 73%. Republicans are now leading Democrat counties by 7.6%
— The Calvin Coolidge Project (@TheCalvinCooli1) October 28, 2024
Via @petebray pic.twitter.com/dDSAH6Oe40
Same!akm91 said:
Yep, wife and I will add 2 more to the R tally in Denton tomorrow.