But first: A disclaimer. These are based on a combination of conventional wisdom (a dem IS gonna win CA, no matter who it is), current state matchups, and a little bit of my opinion here and there. I've tried to be as non-biased as possible. These are just a current snapshot of what the general election might look like if it happened to day, and I don't claim for them to be anything more than that. That said, I've never been wrong. Never. Take that one to the bank.
I've only matched up the two Democrats with John McCain, since Mike Huckabee has not a chance in hell of winning. He doesn't believe in evolution!! COME ON. Who the hell voted for this guy? Even Ron Paul has his racist internet lackies. Fucking libertarians. But I digress.
First, a little electoral college background. You need 270 to win. Anything more is just gravy. Every 10 years, electoral votes are re-proportioned based on that year's Census data. Sadly, the 2000 census was not kind to us Democrats. Republican strongholds like Texas and Georgia got 2 more votes, while Connecticut , Illinois, and Wisconsin, traditionally democratic states, lost one vote, and the extremely safe blue state of NY lost 2 votes. Basically, it became harder for Democrats to win.
This first map is my projection of Barack Obama vs. John McCain
Red state for McCain, blue state for Obama, tan states are my Undecided states.
Based on recent polls, Obama wins. Even without winning any of the tossup states, he has his 270 electoral votes. Bam, winner. He picks up the swing states of Iowa, Nevada, and New Mexico. New Mexico is the most iffy, since John McCain is from a neighboring state, and they poll about even there. However, I gave it to Obama based on the extremely popular Democratic governor Bill Richardson (who is hinting he may endorse Obama in the days to come, even as a prominent former member of the Clinton administration).
Colorado I also gave to Obama. While it went republican in 2000 and 2004, Democrats have been pouring resources in to the mountain west, and are even holding their National Convention there. I went out on a limb and gave it to him.
Virginia is (or should be) the biggest surprise on the list. If there's a republican state in the nation, this is it. Or it was 10 years ago. In the past 8 years, they have elected two popular Democratic governors (Tim Kaine [one of my predictions for Obama's running mate] and Mark Warner [running for the Virginia senate seat held by John Warner, no relation]). They have defeated one popular Republican senator, George Allen (famous for his 'Maccaca' moment, where he called an opponent's dark skinned campaign worker the North African equivalent of nigger), in favor of a anti-war Democrat, Jim Webb. They are on track to elect another Democrat this year by a wide margin (the previously mentioned Mark Warner). They took control of the state legislature in 2007. 2008 is the year we turn Virginia blue. Primary turnout supports this, where Democrats turned out almost double of Republicans.
Florida is McCain's. He has the backing of an extremely popular Florida governor in Charlie Crist, and the electorate is tailor made for him (read as: lots of elderly, idiots, and racists...Fuck you Florida, you piece of shit. Let's sell you the fuck back to Spain).
Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Missouri are all too close to call in my book. We'll see as time passes if anyone gains a distinct advantage.
Now let's take a look at Hillary Clinton vs. John McCain.
As you can see, it is considerably more difficult to imagine a Clinton win scenario. McCain has 260 electoral votes locked up, as far as I'm concerned, and he polls ahead of her in many state polls. She's closer in Florida, but is still behind, and McCain will most likely still win it. She loses Iowa, Wisconsin, Colorado, and Virginia, as well as Nevada, all states Obama wins. Democrats need BOTH undecided states to win in this scenario, according to current polls, whereas they don't need any in the Obama scenario, providing he carries all the states I gave him.
There you have it. We're gonna win. Or maybe not.
Note: The majority of polls I used are Rassumussen state polls, and can be found at the Rasmussen Reports website. Also, I used RealClearPolitics. There's a healthy smattering of SurveryUSA polls thrown in there too.
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