AtticusMatlock said:
I'm sorry I offended you.
He doesn't seem offended, just seems to be posting logical arguments against your argument and you resort to this response which seems to mean you don't have a logical response.
AtticusMatlock said:
I'm sorry I offended you.
1/ Election Night Reference Sheets:
— CA ET Nerd (@earlyvotedata) October 27, 2024
As promised here are the Reference Sheets that you can use for Nov 5 to gauge how things are going. Please note that this is in the perspective of Trump's performance, so if you don't want him to win then just look for the opposite of what is… pic.twitter.com/gjCgcyH8Y7
Early vote has been disproportionately female.
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) October 30, 2024
If men stay at home, Kamala is president. It’s that simple.
If you want a vision of the future if you don't vote, imagine Kamala's voice cackling, forever.
Men need to GO VOTE NOW.
I agree. I believe there's a huge push right now to get people out to vote to account for some shady stuff that's starting to pop up with accepting votes several "days" after the election. Not trying to stir any pots Mods. Some states today allowed for that so it's relevant.SwigAg11 said:
Early voting has actually been more male this year compared to 2020 in key states like PA and AZ. I'm assuming all of this is to encourage men (who more predominantly vote for Trump) to get off the couch and go vote and not slack off.
Total Early Vote Update:
— OSZ (@OpenSourceZone) October 31, 2024
🔴 335,644 (+44,408)
🔵 291,236
🟡 229,341
Total: 856,221
I'm fairly certain he saw PA vote breakdown. Trump will lose PA unless men vote in crazy numbers, from what I read.McInnis 03 said:
I wonder what he saw...... while most GOPers seem happy with the early votes Charlie is sounding an alarmEarly vote has been disproportionately female.
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) October 30, 2024
If men stay at home, Kamala is president. It’s that simple.
If you want a vision of the future if you don't vote, imagine Kamala's voice cackling, forever.
Men need to GO VOTE NOW.
This was explained earlier in the thread. I believe the claim earlier was over 90K. They are not significant parts of the polls and are not significant in the electorate. They do not want to be, largely.GAC06 said:
Supposedly there are about 90k Amish in Pennsylvania. They're not getting 80k Amish votes
GAC06 said:
Supposedly there are about 90k Amish in Pennsylvania. They're not getting 80k Amish votes
#NVEV Worst Case Scenario for Trump, a revisit: Current statewide R lead is 44k. I estimate Clark VBM to be ~410k this year (457k in 2020, a COVID year). So far 283k is in, so 127k remains. Current Clark VBM is D+18.2. Let’s generously assume it’s D+20 for those 127k ballots
— au ng (@athein1) October 31, 2024
1/
The net overall R lead will still be ~19k and that’s a sure win for Trump.
— au ng (@athein1) October 31, 2024
3/end
UPDATE: Michigan GOP counties still outpacing Dem counties, but their relative advantage narrowed to 8.1%. Strong GOP areas seeing 5.7% surge in NEW ballot requests vs 3.7% for Dem areas. These fresh requests take time to return, dampening return rates. pic.twitter.com/YlGRXIio69
— petebray (@petebray) October 30, 2024
There's no better way to close a Wednesday evening than with an update from Nevada.
— Michael Pruser (@MichaelPruser) October 31, 2024
🔴Republicans - 335,644
🔵Democrats - 291,236
🟡Others - 229,341
We've crossed 850,000 votes and have ~62% of the expected electorate banked.
Republicans won the day for the everyth (industry… pic.twitter.com/3m99t3PfVz
Arizona presents a slightly different picture than Nevada in terms of voters remaining.
— Michael Pruser (@MichaelPruser) October 30, 2024
Here, Democrats are burning through their 3/3s faster. This has not stopped Republicans from picking up tens of thousands of net votes with each update simply because Republicans have so many… pic.twitter.com/LIMzwv1Y3t
Trump doesn't have anything to worry about.jr15aggie said:AtticusMatlock said:
There is some Republican to Democrat crossover in terms of the Nikki Haley type of female Republican voter who was voting for Harris. So Republicans having huge returns doesn't mean they are all going for Trump.
I just don't buy it... so the EV Republican numbers are WAY up because of all the female republicans rushing to the polls to vote Harris?
And at the same time the EV Democrat numbers are WAY down because, what, all of the female Democrats are sitting around waiting to vote on election day?
I'm far from an expert, but nope, does not compute at all... at least not in regard to the sweeping/broad changes in the EV numbers this year compared to previous years.
Today's North Carolina update: 🔴 Republican leads slow but grow, 🟡 Independents gain strength
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) October 31, 2024
The North Carolina map at https://t.co/OQmut71g35 has been updated. Republicans grow their lead in early voting by almost 5,000 to 🔴+47,007.
Before I go into the details - There… pic.twitter.com/zFZmqgGwhL
Another day, another 254,401 votes banked in North Carolina. 3.62 million votes have been cast, nearly two-thirds of the expected final total.
— Michael Pruser (@MichaelPruser) October 31, 2024
🔴Republicans - 1,230,530
🟡Others - 1,208,335
🔵Democrats - 1,183,954
Like yesterday, 'Others' ruled the day, but they did so… pic.twitter.com/hHOlISrWMq
Another thing people need to remember is that every voter that flips is a net 2 vote swing and I think there will be more that flip from D to R than the other way around.aezmvp said:
Yes we need significant turn out there. A couple of notes on it though. AA votes are way down. 4% over 2020. Some of those will also be split off as Trump is generally doing 5-10% better among AA in 24 than he did in 20. Additionally women are only up a point and I expect that will be the same as 20 or a bit lower. Now married is out performing their share of the electorate vs. 20 by 10 points (this largely, imo, correlates to a 10 point drop in unknown marital status in the state, but it won't be 1 to 1) that is a trend we see nationwide. In fact married women will either lean or be outright GOP voters more than half the time. I'm cautiously optimistic in NC. Want that ED vote to blow the doors off however.
White-Black Turnout Gap in Georgia Comparison:
— OSZ (@OpenSourceZone) October 31, 2024
2016: ⚪️ White +6.2
2020: ⚪️ White +6.4
2024: ⚪️ White +13.1
Interesting to see turnout neck and neck between D and R and so much lower in the "other" category. Anybody polling that group to get an idea which way they lean? With the registration advantage and expected ED boost to turnout on the R side, seems like the others would have to break hard for the Ds for Harris to have any chance in Az.Captn_Ag05 said:
Just plugged the latest Arizona reports in.
Prosperdick said:Another thing people need to remember is that every voter that flips is a net 2 vote swing and I think there will be more that flip from D or R than the other way around.aezmvp said:
Yes we need significant turn out there. A couple of notes on it though. AA votes are way down. 4% over 2020. Some of those will also be split off as Trump is generally doing 5-10% better among AA in 24 than he did in 20. Additionally women are only up a point and I expect that will be the same as 20 or a bit lower. Now married is out performing their share of the electorate vs. 20 by 10 points (this largely, imo, correlates to a 10 point drop in unknown marital status in the state, but it won't be 1 to 1) that is a trend we see nationwide. In fact married women will either lean or be outright GOP voters more than half the time. I'm cautiously optimistic in NC. Want that ED vote to blow the doors off however.
Sure, there will be some women who flip from R to D just because the candidate is a woman (if their single issue is abortion they were never R to begin with) but I think more blacks and hispanics (especially men) will flip to R and that is huge.
Others are also lagging pretty badly in Nevada and Florida (although catching up a bit in Florida). That is part of the reason I think turnout will be down several % from four years ago and look a lot more like the 2016 turnout numbers.txags92 said:Interesting to see turnout neck and neck between D and R and so much lower in the "other" category. Anybody polling that group to get an idea which way they lean? With the registration advantage and expected ED boost to turnout on the R side, seems like the others would have to break hard for the Ds for Harris to have any chance in Az.Captn_Ag05 said:
Just plugged the latest Arizona reports in.
🚨 ARIZONA EARLY VOTE UPDATE
— Red Eagle Politics (@RedEaglePatriot) October 31, 2024
🔴 828K (+154K!)
🔵 674K
🟡 522K
🔵 TDIH 2020: D+63K
🔵 TDIH 2022: D+22K
GOP lead in Maricopa County hits 100K
🔴 31-Oct Pennsylvania Early Voting Update: Steady sailing to victory 🔴https://t.co/euSd3jfkGB
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) October 31, 2024
Today in Pennsylvania, Advantage Trump has taken another large day-over-day jump by 🔴 R+0.65% to 🔴 R+17.10%. PA mail returns are still pouring in for both parties, and on this… pic.twitter.com/OVj9tqNBNI
Quote:
More than half of the likely electorate in both Georgia (59%) and North Carolina (52%) say they've already cast their ballots, with those voters splitting narrowly toward Harris by a 7-point margin in Georgia and by 6 points in North Carolina.
OldArmy71 said:
I have no idea how anyone can say anything about early voting, but CNN says that Harris leads in both Georgia and NC:Quote:
More than half of the likely electorate in both Georgia (59%) and North Carolina (52%) say they've already cast their ballots, with those voters splitting narrowly toward Harris by a 7-point margin in Georgia and by 6 points in North Carolina.
Statewide EV still lagging 2020, but gap has closed the last 2 days.aggiehawg said:
Anecdotal from our little burg. The Hubs and I just got back from early voting. (I took a bad fall and banged up my right knee and ankle, so haven't been able to walk well for several days and still have to use a tripod cane and move very slowly.)
In years past when we would go early vote, usually the only ones in there or one or two other voters. Today ove the lunch hour there 8-10 in there and several more coming in while we were there. Asked the lady how busy had they had been. She said more busy than she ever seen it over the last four cycles and they still expected a busy election day with record turnout. People are voting heavily.