That’s the phrase Josh Marshall used to describe this clip:
I couldn’t help noticing a loss of dignity over at FOX News as well….
by Darryl — ,
That’s the phrase Josh Marshall used to describe this clip:
I couldn’t help noticing a loss of dignity over at FOX News as well….
by Darryl — ,
Please join us tonight for an evening of politics and conversation over a pint at the Seattle Chapter of Drinking Liberally.
Obama’s “post convention bump” seems to be growing. My latest Monte Carlo Analysis of the state head-to-head polls has Obama leading Romney by an average of 341 to 197 electoral votes. On the other hand, there are cries from the right of ”liberal bias” in the polls. They suggest some kind of vast left-wing conspiracy among nearly all pollsters to include too many Democrats! Sure…and it’s probably orchestrated by the folks who brought us global warming….
Join us as we conspire every Tuesday at the Montlake Ale House, 2307 24th Avenue E. Starting time is 8:00pm. Some people show up earlier for Dinner.
Can’t make it to Seattle’s DL tonight? There are lots of other Washington state chapters of DL meeting over the next week. The Tri-Cities chapter also meets tonight. On Wednesday, the Burien chapter meets. On Thursday the Woodinville chapter meets. And on Monday, the Yakima, South Bellevue and Olympia chapters meet.
With 232 chapters of Living Liberally, including thirteen in Washington state four in Oregon and three more in Idaho, chances are excellent there’s a chapter that meets near you.
by Darryl — ,
| Obama | Romney |
| 100.0% probability of winning | 0.0% probability of winning |
| Mean of 341 electoral votes | Mean of 197 electoral votes |
Beginning this analysis, I’ve narrowed the “current polling window.” The old window included all polls taken within the past month. That criterion resulted in some states with many “current” polls, including some pre-conventions polls.
The new criterion is three weeks, so that almost all the polling occurs after the conventions. You can expect the window to shrink to two weeks sometime in October.
There are two effects from shrinking the window. First, the number of individuals polled goes down for some states. With fewer respondents, we have less evidence and, therefore, uncertainty increases (all else being equal).
The other effect is that there is less smoothing of the results. That is, the results become more indicative of trends.
Taken together, we might expect that Governor Mitt Romney’s chances improve through the increase in uncertainty. We can also expect Romney’s chances to decrease as a result of a recent poll surge for Obama. As it happens, the latter has a much stronger effect. The net effect is that Romney takes a beating….
The previous analysis had Obama leading Romney by 331 to 207 electoral votes, and the analysis suggested that Obama would almost certainly win an election held now.
Nineteen new polls covering 13 states have appeared in the past two days. Additionally, I’ve found four older polls (one each in AL, CO, OH, and FL) by comparing my database against Samuel Minter’s database.
Here are the new polls:
| start | end | sample | % | % | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| st | poll | date | date | size | MOE | O | R | diff |
| AR | Talk Business-Hendrix College | 17-Sep | 17-Sep | 2228 | 2.0 | 34.5 | 55.5 | R+21.0 |
| CO | PPP | 20-Sep | 23-Sep | 940 | 3.2 | 51 | 45 | O+6 |
| FL | PPP | 20-Sep | 23-Sep | 861 | 3.3 | 50 | 46 | O+4 |
| FL | WA Post | 19-Sep | 23-Sep | 769 | 4.5 | 51 | 47 | O+4 |
| FL | ARG | 20-Sep | 22-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 50 | 45 | O+5 |
| IA | ARG | 20-Sep | 23-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 51 | 44 | O+7 |
| MI | Rasmussen | 20-Sep | 20-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 54 | 42 | O+12 |
| MN | Mason-Dixon | 17-Sep | 19-Sep | 800 | 3.5 | 48 | 40 | O+8 |
| MT | Mason-Dixon | 17-Sep | 19-Sep | 625 | 4.0 | 42 | 51 | R+9 |
| NV | ARG | 20-Sep | 23-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 51 | 44 | O+7 |
| NV | NV Retailers | 19-Sep | 20-Sep | 500 | 4.4 | 46 | 46 | tie |
| NV | PPP | 18-Sep | 20-Sep | 501 | 4.4 | 52 | 43 | O+9 |
| NJ | Monmouth | 19-Sep | 23-Sep | 613 | 4.0 | 52 | 37 | O+15 |
| NC | Civitas | 18-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 49 | 45 | O+4 |
| OH | Gravis Marketing | 21-Sep | 22-Sep | 594 | 4.3 | 45.3 | 44.3 | O+1.0 |
| OH | WA Post | 19-Sep | 23-Sep | 759 | 4.5 | 52 | 44 | O+8 |
| PA | Susquehanna | 18-Sep | 20-Sep | 800 | 3.5 | 47 | 45 | O+2 |
| PA | Mercyhurst U | 12-Sep | 20-Sep | 522 | 4.3 | 48 | 40 | O+8 |
| WI | WeAskAmerica | 20-Sep | 23-Sep | 1238 | 2.8 | 52.5 | 41.0 | O+11.5 |
With this new poll, seven of eight current Colorado polls go to Obama suggesting he would win an election now with about a 95% probability. One can sense from the last three months of polling that Obama is gaining slowly in the state:
Florida has Obama up by +4% in two new polls and +5 in another. Obama has now led in five consecutive polls in the state. That trend we can almost discern in Colorado is even more apparent in Florida:

Romney took the previous Iowa poll, but this new one goes +7% for Obama. The three current polls, take together, suggest Obama has a 95% chance of taking the state right now.
Another solid Michigan poll for Obama leaves him with a certain win in the state (at least, for now).
Three new Nevada polls have Obama up by +7%, +9%, and +0% (i.e. tied). It looks like Obama is regaining the lead he held there six months ago:

The Civitas Institute is a right wing think tank in North Carolina, but they release all their polls. This one has Obama leading by +4%. Obama leads in four of the six current polls and the last three in a row. Still, the weight of evidence goes very slightly to Romney. The trend seems to be in Obama’s favor:
Two new Ohio polls favor Obama, one by a whisper, the other by +8%. Looking at the three month polling trend in the state, the past few weeks have not been kind to Romney:

Obama gets his best and his worst poll in recent months in today’s Pennsylvania collection. Still, it is hard to argue that Obama’s lead isn’t solid:
Finally, a double-digit lead for Obama in Wisconsin caps off a very favorable collection of recent polls in the state for the President. Whatever momentum Romney had in the state in August seems to have almost entirely vanished:

Now after 100,000 simulated elections, Obama wins 100,000 times and Romney wins 0 times. Obama receives (on average) 341 (+10) to Romney’s 197 (-10) electoral votes. In a hypothetical election held now, Obama would have a 100.0% probability of winning.


by Carl Ballard — ,
– I didn’t watch the game because of the scab refs. Did anything happen?
– I’ve never heard Seattle Center called Seattle’s Living Room.
by Carl Ballard — ,
At least until it’s up and running on Saturday. Or until I think of something else. But I was looking at the map of C route on West Seattle Blog that I linked to in the Open Thread, and I had a few more thoughts.
First off, every time before now that I saw the maps, I’d completely missed that they were connected. Up at the top it says, “Continues as Rapid Ride D.” For some reason I had thought they were separate routes. So, it’ll be sort of like now from West Seattle downtown, the 54 changing into the 5, sometimes. You won’t have to get off. This alleviates some of my worries about the D route deadending in North Downtown. So if you’re in Pioneer Square and you’re heading to Ballard you catch the C North and it quickly turns into the D. Hopefully always? Like it’s one route.
I don’t know if that was a branding issue, or what, but it seems like it would make more sense to call it one line now that there’s no free ride area to confuse when you board. Maybe it’s a lesson from the failure of the Monorail where everybody criticized it for going from West Seattle to Ballard, when obviously the point was it went from Ballard or West Seattle to Downtown and then continuing to the other.
The other thing I noticed is that it goes on the Viaduct. This makes sense for now: it’s going from West Seattle to Downtown. But the Viaduct won’t be around much longer, and the tunnel won’t have an exit on Seneca or an entrance on Columbia. Presumably it’ll either go through SoDo or I-5, but either way will make it less rapid. If it’s through SoDo, hopefully, they’ll have figured out signal prioritization.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– Rapid Ride C and pay as you enter both ways are coming to West Seattle.
– A plurality of Shoreline residents would support a plastic bag ban. So it’s not just the dirty hippies in Seattle.
– Bullshit.
– Only one of these things is a gaff.
– Obama needs to work on being a better antichrist.
by Darryl — ,
| Obama | Romney |
| 100.0% probability of winning | 0.0% probability of winning |
| Mean of 331 electoral votes | Mean of 207 electoral votes |


I’ve finally succumbed to the pressure of “doing something about South Carolina.” The last straw was Goldy harassing me over the phone for the umpteenth time this past week. So, I caved and changed the inclusion criteria for states lacking “current polls.” Note that I did not simply drop the vexing S.C. poll, but the new inclusion criteria means that when there are no current polls, multiple old polls will be pooled.
Here is what I have been doing: If a state does not have a “current poll”, I use the single most recent poll available. Right now, the definition of “current poll” is any poll taken over the past month (this “window” will shrink as the election approaches and the pace of polling increases).
That simple rule worked pretty well in 2008. But a single, large poll in South Carolina has plagued these analyses since late last year. The poll is perfectly valid, and might even be correct in giving Obama an 85% probability of winning the state. But it is quite old, and there are other slightly older polls in the state that contradict it. What’s an analyst to do?
I modified a suggestion from Richard Pope and used an inclusion window for older polls, the length of which depends on how old the most recent poll is. Here his the new rule set:
There are several disadvantages of this new rule set: First, it is complicated. As you know, I strive to minimize arbitrary assumptions in the methods, but now I’ve gone and added a complex, arbitrary rule. Yuck. Another disadvantage is that the new rules will tend to overestimate the winning certainty for states with multiple old polls included in an analysis. On the other hand, a state that hasn’t been polled in a long time probably hasn’t been polled much, so most of the time the single most recent poll will still be used. South Carolina is an exception. There were a bunch of polls taken late last year. I believe this happened because there was “piggyback” polling of the general election by pollsters covering the contentious G.O.P. primary in that state.
Okay…so let’s get to it. Just three days ago the analysis had President Barack Obama leading Gov. Mitt Romney by 336 to 202 electoral votes. The results suggested that, if an election was held now, Obama would almost certainly win.
In the three days since my previous analysis, there have been some 19 new polls (plus, I am including an old poll, previously overlooked). Here are the polls:
| start | end | sample | % | % | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| st | poll | date | date | size | MOE | O | R | diff |
| AZ | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 45 | 48 | R+3 |
| CA | PPIC | 09-Sep | 16-Sep | 995 | 4.4 | 53 | 39 | O+14 |
| CO | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 48 | 45 | O+3 |
| CO | Marist | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 971 | 3.1 | 50 | 45 | O+5 |
| FL | Mason-Dixon | 17-Sep | 19-Sep | 800 | 3.5 | 48 | 47 | O+1 |
| FL | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 47 | 48 | R+1 |
| GA | InsiderAdvangage | 18-Sep | 18-Sep | 483 | 4.5 | 35 | 56 | R+21 |
| IA | Marist | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 898 | 3.3 | 50 | 42 | O+8 |
| NE | Wiese Res | 17-Sep | 20-Sep | 800 | 3.5 | 40 | 51 | R+11 |
| NE2 | Wiese Res | 17-Sep | 20-Sep | 400 | 4.9 | 44 | 44 | tie |
| NC | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 48 | 46 | O+2 |
| NC | High Point | 08-Sep | 18-Sep | 448 | 4.7 | 48 | 44 | O+4 |
| OH | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 48 | 44 | O+4 |
| OH | FOX News | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 1009 | 3.0 | 49 | 42 | O+7 |
| OH | Ohio Poll | 13-Sep | 18-Sep | 861 | 3.3 | 51 | 45 | O+6 |
| OH | Gravis Marketing | 07-Sep | 08-Sep | 1548 | 2.7 | 47.3 | 43.2 | O+4.1 |
| PA | Rasmussen | 19-Sep | 19-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 51 | 39 | O+12 |
| SD | Neilson Brothers | 29-Aug | 06-Sep | 512 | 4.3 | 38.7 | 53.9 | R+15.2 |
| VA | Purple Poll | 15-Sep | 19-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 46 | 43 | O+3 |
| WI | Marist | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 968 | 3.2 | 50 | 45 | O+5 |
The race seems to tighten in Arizona where Romney just squeaks by with a +3%. Also, this is the first time since early June that Romney has been under 50%.
On the other hand, California tightens as well. Obama gets +14% where he used to pull in the low +20%.
Another pair of Colorado polls go to Obama, who leads in seven of the eight current polls, and seems to have a 91% chance of taking the state (in an election held now).
Florida gives each candidate a poll, by +1%. From twelve polls pooled over the past month, the ~11,000 responses go to Obama 50.8% of the time and to Romney 49.2% of the time. That translates into an 88% probability that Obama would win the state now.
The good news for Romney is that Georgia shows the strongest result for him this year.
Iowa has a strong +8% result for Obama. This poll was taken slightly before the Rasmussen poll I included last analysis that had Romney up by +3%. Even so, with Obama taking two of the three current polls, Obama would seem to have an 89% chance of taking the state right now.
We finally have some polling in Nebraska, where Romney bests Obama by +11%. That the good news for Romney. Recall that Nebraska assigns one elector to the winner of each CD, and the overall state winner gets the other two electors. The bad news for Romney is that Nebraska’s second congressional district polls at a 44% tie. Obama won NE-2 in 2008 and may do it again! (The polling report mentions that Romney has a solid lead in the other two CD’s, but the numbers are not given; instead, an older poll is used for those two CDs. Romney leads in both.)
Two new North Carolina polls go to Obama by small margins. Even so, Romney has led in five of nine current polls (and there was a tie). Overall, the pooled polls favor Romney with an 83% probability of winning an election held now.
With the three new Ohio polls, Obama has a streak of eight consecutive poll leads in the state. Obama won 99% of the simulated elections in the state.
A double-digit lead for Obama in the newest Pennsylvania poll. Obama has won all four of the state’s current polls.
South Dakota gives Romney his first double digit SC lead of the year.
Like Ohio, the new Virginia poll gives Obama a streak of eight consecutive poll leads in the state. But Obama only won 95% of the simulated elections in Virginia.
The new Wisconsin poll means Obama leads in all five current polls, and gives Obama a very high probability of taking the state (in a hypothetical election held now).
After a Monte Carlo analysis with 100,000 simulated elections, Obama wins 100,000 times and Romney wins 0 times. Obama receives (on average) 331 to Romney’s 207 electoral votes. Obama has a 100.0% probability of winning and Romney has a 0.0% probability of winning. And that is with South Carolina going to Romney 95% of the time.
Using the new “old poll inclusion criteria,” here is the picture of the race over time:

Hmmm…it looks pretty much like the old one that used the simple “single most recent” rule.
by Lee — ,
Last week’s contest was won by milwhcky. It was in Port Orchard.
This week’s is related to something in the news from September, good luck!
by Goldy — ,
[HA Bible Study is on hiatus through the November election as we honor Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney by studying the scriptures of his Mormon religion.]
Book of Mormon, Mosiah 11:6
Yea, and thus they were supported in their laziness, and in their idolatry, and in their whoredoms, by the taxes which king Noah had put upon his people; thus did the people labor exceedingly to support iniquity.
Discuss.
by Darryl — ,
Guide to voter ID laws.
Thom: The Good, the Bad, and the Very, Very Ugly.
Roy Zimmerman with Sandy Riccardi: The Wedding of Church and State:
Thom: The Good, the Bad and The Very, Very Ugly.
Ed: Democrats Rebound in Senate Races For 2012
Mark Fiore: Why do they hate us?
President Obama on Letterman.
Young Turks: Rush Limbaugh blames “Feminazis” for his small penis.
Thom and Pap: GOP says “lazy people shouldn’t vote.
Obama v. Romney in Patriot Games:
Ann Telnaes: Testing your free speech limits.
White House: West Wing Week.
WILLARD!!!
Ann Telnaes: Justice Scalia vents.
Thom: More Good, Bad, and Very, Very Ugly.
Jon: Jesus’ wife.
Sarah Silverman does a Voter ID PSA:
Sam Seder: Florida makes it almost impossible to register to vote.
Young Turks: ON that Sarah Silverman video.
Last week’s Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza can be found here.
by Carl Ballard — ,
While I’m generally a McGinn partisan, I haven’t been impressed with his handling of police reform. After the Williams killing, he was quick to do symbolic things right: he declared a John T. Williams day, and did his part to make sure the totem poll got a place in Seattle Center, something I think most mayors would have fought. And there are other times where individually or symbolically he’s been good. But after the DOJ report, he dragged his feet, when he should have lead.
So, I’m heartened to read, at least initially, that Connie Rice seems to be saying the right things.
“I need to understand the factions,” Rice told me after her first day of interviews with community groups, the mayor, and cops. She says a court order approved by US District Court judge James Robart last month to remedy patterns of excessive force and racial bias in policing is “just a document.” Before the city can make cultural changes, everyone involved—the mayor, council, city attorney, beat cops, community groups, etc.—must decide that “you all want to jump off the cliff together.”
Dominic Holden is still pretty skeptical. And perhaps rightly so. For now, I have some hope that things might work out.
by Carl Ballard — ,
It’s that time of year again. When Saint Park(ing) magically tuns a few parking spaces throughout the city into tiny parks.
PARK(ing) Day happens every third Friday in September and is an opportunity for artists, activists, and community members to temporarily make parking spaces into parks. The event raises awareness about important issues like creating a walkable, livable, healthy city.
If any of those spaces are near you, and you have time at lunch, or whatever, check them out.
by Darryl — ,
| Obama | Romney |
| 100.0% probability of winning | 0.0% probability of winning |
| Mean of 336 electoral votes | Mean of 202 electoral votes |
My previous Monte Carlo analysis, conducted one week ago, showed President Barack Obama leading Governor Mitt Romney by (on average) 306 to 232 electoral votes. If the election had been held last week, the analysis suggested that Obama would win with a 97.9% probability.
I guess I waited too long to do a new analysis, because the past week has brought us 47 new polls (plus a poll that breaks out Maine’s two congressional districts):
| start | end | sample | % | % | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| st | poll | date | date | size | MOE | O | R | diff |
| CA | Field Poll | 06-Sep | 17-Sep | 891 | 3.4 | 58 | 34 | O+24 |
| CO | Rasmussen | 17-Sep | 17-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 45 | 47 | R+2 |
| CO | Quinnipiac | 11-Sep | 17-Sep | 1497 | 3.0 | 48 | 47 | O+1 |
| CO | ARG | 10-Sep | 12-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 49 | 47 | O+2 |
| CO | SurveyUSA | 09-Sep | 12-Sep | 615 | 4.0 | 47 | 46 | O+1 |
| CT | U CT | 11-Sep | 16-Sep | 508 | 4.4 | 53 | 32 | O+21 |
| FL | WeAskAmerica | 18-Sep | 18-Sep | 1230 | 2.8 | 49.1 | 45.5 | O+3.6 |
| FL | FOX News | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 829 | 3.0 | 49 | 44 | O+5 |
| FL | Gravis Marketing | 15-Sep | 16-Sep | 1728 | 2.5 | 47.1 | 47.7 | R+0.6 |
| IA | Rasmussen | 19-Sep | 19-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 44 | 47 | R+3 |
| KY | SurveyUSA | 11-Sep | 13-Sep | 606 | 4.1 | 39 | 53 | R+14 |
| ME | PPP | 17-Sep | 18-Sep | 804 | 3.5 | 55 | 39 | O+16 |
| ME | Maine PRC | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 856 | 3.4 | 53.5 | 37.3 | O+16.2 |
| ME1 | Maine PRC | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 445 | — | 58.7 | 33.9 | O+24.8 |
| ME2 | Maine PRC | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 410 | — | 47.8 | 41.0 | O+6.8 |
| MA | WBUR | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 507 | 4.4 | 59 | 31 | O+28 |
| MA | UMass-Lowell | 13-Sep | 17-Sep | 497 | 5.5 | 59 | 36 | O+23 |
| MA | Suffolk | 13-Sep | 16-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 63.5 | 30.5 | O+33.0 |
| MA | PPP | 13-Sep | 16-Sep | 876 | 3.3 | 57 | 39 | O+18 |
| MA | WNEU | 06-Sep | 13-Sep | 444 | 4.6 | 60 | 38 | O+22 |
| MI | Detroit News | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 52.0 | 37.8 | O+14.2 |
| MI | CNN | 14-Sep | 18-Sep | 754 | 3.5 | 52 | 44 | O+8 |
| MI | MRG | 10-Sep | 15-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 47.5 | 42.3 | O+5.2 |
| MI | Baydoun | 12-Sep | 12-Sep | 1156 | 2.9 | 45.5 | 43.7 | O+1.8 |
| NV | Rasmussen | 18-Sep | 18-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 47 | 45 | O+2 |
| NV | CNN | 14-Sep | 18-Sep | 741 | 3.5 | 49 | 46 | O+3 |
| NH | Rasmussen | 18-Sep | 18-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 45 | 48 | R+3 |
| NH | ARG | 15-Sep | 17-Sep | 463 | 4.5 | 48 | 47 | O+1 |
| NJ | Philadelphia Inquirer | 09-Sep | 12-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 51 | 37 | O+14 |
| NJ | Fairleigh Dickinson | 06-Sep | 12-Sep | 706 | 3.8 | 52 | 38 | O+14 |
| NC | Rasmussen | 13-Sep | 13-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 45 | 51 | R+6 |
| OH | Rasmussen | 12-Sep | 12-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 47 | 46 | O+1 |
| OH | ARG | 10-Sep | 12-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 48 | 47 | O+1 |
| OR | SurveyUSA | 10-Sep | 13-Sep | 552 | 4.3 | 49.5 | 40.7 | O+8.9 |
| PA | WeAskAmerica | 18-Sep | 18-Sep | 1214 | 2.9 | 48.1 | 42.2 | O+5.9 |
| PA | Muhlenberg | 10-Sep | 16-Sep | 640 | 4.0 | 50 | 41 | O+9 |
| PA | Philadelphia Inquirer | 09-Sep | 12-Sep | 600 | 4.0 | 50 | 39 | O+11 |
| VA | FOX News | 16-Sep | 18-Sep | 1006 | 3.0 | 50 | 43 | O+7 |
| VA | WeAskAmerica | 17-Sep | 17-Sep | 1238 | 2.8 | 48.5 | 45.7 | O+2.8 |
| VA | PPP | 13-Sep | 16-Sep | 1021 | 3.1 | 51 | 46 | O+5 |
| VA | Quinnipiac | 11-Sep | 17-Sep | 1474 | 3.0 | 50 | 46 | O+4 |
| VA | WA Post | 12-Sep | 16-Sep | 847 | 4.0 | 52 | 44 | O+8 |
| VA | Rasmussen | 13-Sep | 13-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 49 | 48 | O+1 |
| WA | Elway | 09-Sep | 12-Sep | 405 | 5.0 | 53 | 36 | O+17 |
| WA | SurveyUSA | 07-Sep | 09-Sep | 524 | 4.4 | 54.4 | 37.6 | O+16.8 |
| WI | PPP | 18-Sep | 19-Sep | 842 | 3.4 | 52 | 45 | O+7 |
| WI | Rasmussen | 17-Sep | 17-Sep | 500 | 4.5 | 49 | 46 | O+3 |
| WI | Marquette | 13-Sep | 16-Sep | 601 | 4.1 | 54 | 40 | O+14 |
| WI | Quinnipiac | 11-Sep | 17-Sep | 1485 | 3.0 | 51 | 45 | O+6 |
I’ll just comment briefly on some states. Overall, the week’s polling looks very good for Obama, but with a couple of minor exceptions.
Obama takes three of four Colorado polls. This suggests a slight but real lead in the state. The Monte Carlo analysis gave Obama an 84% probability of winning based on the seven current polls.
Obama comes out on top in Florida. He has led in seven of the eleven polls taken over the past month.
Iowa is one of the few bright spots for Romney. He leads Obama by +3% in this week’s poll. But Obama leads in the other current poll, and overall has a very slight edge.
Romney looks destined to loose his boyhood home state of Michigan that gives Obama leads in four polls ranging from +2% to +14%.
Nevada is looking blue, but not by much. Combined with one other poll from the past month, the analysis gives Obama an 81% probability of taking the state.
Romney is up by +3% in one poll and down by -1% in another in New Hampshire. Combined with one other current poll Obama gets a 63% probability of winning now.
The other bit of good news for Romney is the most recent North Carolina poll that has Romney leading Obama by a modest +6%. Romney now leads in five of eight current polls and must be considered the leader in the state. A turn-around for Romney can be discerned from the last 6 months of polling:
There are three new Ohio polls, but I accidentally left the new FOX News poll out for this analysis. Even without that +7% for Obama, the two new polls give Obama a slight lead. Romney has only led in one of the seven current polls, and Obama would be expected to win the state now with a 90% probability. (The FOX News poll will be in the next analysis.)
We finally get a new poll in Oregon, and Obama is still up by something over 8%.
Pennsylvania is still looking blue. The past past month of polling has Obama winning an election now with certainty.
Six new polls in Virginia all go pretty convincingly for Obama. The polling history over six months completes the story…whatever advantage Romney had in the state a few weeks ago was transient:

It doesn’t look like Ryan will be delivering Wisconsin to Romney. The four new polls range from +3% to +14% for Obama. If anything, the selection of Ryan has moved the state further into Obama’s column:
Now, after a Monte Carlo analysis employing 100,000 simulated elections, Obama wins 99,975 times and Romney wins 25 times. Obama receives (on average) 336 to Romney’s 202 electoral votes. The analysis suggests that, in an election right now, Obama would have very nearly a 100.0% probability of defeating Romney.
The long term trends in this race can be seen from a series of elections simulated every seven days using polls from 20 Sep 2011 to 20 Sep 2012, and including polls from the preceding month (FAQ). Obama is performing near his peak for the election season.



Here is the distribution of electoral votes [FAQ] from the simulations:
[Read more…]
by Carl Ballard — ,
Patty Murray’s press release about the GOP killing the Veterans Jobs Corps Act.
“It’s both shocking and shameful that Republicans today chose to kill a bill to put America’s veterans back to work. At a time when one in four young veterans are unemployed, Republicans should have been able, for just this once, to put aside the politics of obstruction and to help these men and women provide for their families.
“But this vote is stark reminder that Senator McConnell and Senate Republicans are willing to do absolutely anything to fulfill the pledge he made nearly two years ago to defeat President Obama. It doesn’t matter who gets in their way or which Americans they have to sacrifice in that pursuit, even if it’s our nation’s veterans.
“It’s unbelievable that even after more than a decade of war many Republicans still will not acknowledge that the treatment of our veterans is a cost of war. Today they voted down a fully paid for bill that included bipartisan ideas to put veterans in jobs that will allow them to serve their communities. Jobs that would have helped provide veterans with the self-esteem that is so critical to their successful transition home.
“Today Senate Republicans told the less than 1% of Americans who have spent the last decade serving and sacrificing for the other 99% of Americans that they are not willing to honor that sacrifice with new investments in their well-being when they return home.”
I hate that we went to war in Iraq. I hate that the war in Afghanistan is still going on (and I wasn’t happy with it from the beginning, although unlike Iraq, I understood the case for it). But as long as we decide to go to war, we’d damn well better make sure we do right by the people who fight it.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– Increases in human services in Seattle.
– Who could have predicted tolling 99 would be a problem?
– How dead is the Romney campaign?
– GIF Parade!
Eager to share our brilliant political commentary and blunt media criticism, but too genteel to link to horsesass.org? Well, good news, ladies: we also answer to HASeattle.com, because, you know, whatever. You're welcome!I no longer use Twitter or Facebook because Nazis. But until BlueSky is bought and enshittified, you can still follow me at @goldy.horsesass.org