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Atocep 10-29-2020 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3308843)
Right, but margin of error is what it is in relationship to a specific poll. It has less validity when averaging a group of polls, and less than that when extending to it to several states. You'd need those states all to have the multiple polls in them be off in the same direction by similar amounts, amounts which in some cases are pretty much at the margin of error. That's possible, but extremely unlikely and is not what margin of error measures.


It would make more sense if it's a block of states that are close and similar politically, which is what swung the election for Trump in 2016. Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania having polling errors makes sense. Arizona, Iowa, NC, Pennsylvania, and Florida all having the same polling error favoring the same candidate makes little sense.

It's definitely within the realm of possibility, but we're talking about things that are in play to give Trump the 11% chance he's sitting at now that likely sits at 7-8% by election day.

HerRealName 10-29-2020 11:09 AM

This is a related tweet. It shows the difference between current polling and includes a column showing the results adjusted by 2016 errors. Biden still wins this scenario but it's a lot tighter.



ISiddiqui 10-29-2020 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3308843)
Right, but margin of error is what it is in relationship to a specific poll. It has less validity when averaging a group of polls, and less than that when extending to it to several states. You'd need those states all to have the multiple polls in them be off in the same direction by similar amounts, amounts which in some cases are pretty much at the margin of error. That's possible, but extremely unlikely and is not what margin of error measures.


Exactly. If the MoE is the same direction in the max level for every poll, it's a massive polling error.

JPhillips 10-29-2020 11:22 AM

The best case scenario for Trump is a narrow win while losing the popular vote by millions more than in 2016(look at the polling differences in safe Red states). That isn't a recipe for stability.

larrymcg421 10-29-2020 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3308847)
The best case scenario for Trump is a narrow win while losing the popular vote by millions more than in 2016(look at the polling differences in safe Red states). That isn't a recipe for stability.


I still don't get these takes. Maybe I'm missing something, but what is unique about Biden that he would appeal to red states but not to moderates in swing states?

JPhillips 10-29-2020 12:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3308849)
I still don't get these takes. Maybe I'm missing something, but what is unique about Biden that he would appeal to red states but not to moderates in swing states?


I think Biden will win. I'm just saying any prediction that Trump will win includes the idea that he'll fair worse in red states than in 2016. He's down 8 to 10 points from 2016 in pretty much every red state.

Outside a handful of crazies, nobody thinks Trump can win the popular vote and it's almost certainly going to be way more lopsided than in 2016.

Ben E Lou 10-29-2020 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HerRealName (Post 3308845)
This is a related tweet. It shows the difference between current polling and includes a column showing the results adjusted by 2016 errors. Biden still wins this scenario but it's a lot tighter.






Just added it up. Unless I missed something, the "polling errors as bad as 2016" scenario is 335-203 Biden.


larrymcg421 10-29-2020 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3308854)
I think Biden will win. I'm just saying any prediction that Trump will win includes the idea that he'll fair worse in red states than in 2016. He's down 8 to 10 points from 2016 in pretty much every red state.

Outside a handful of crazies, nobody thinks Trump can win the popular vote and it's almost certainly going to be way more lopsided than in 2016.


Right, I get that you think Biden will win. I just don't agree with the scenarios of Trump's win.

In 2016, Pennsylvania was just under 3 points to the right of the popular vote. If Trump wins the election, but loses the popular vote by more, then Pennsylvania will have moved even more to the right. That doesn't make sense given that 2018 went heavily blue for Dems in PA and all evidence shows that Biden is more popular than Clinton in PA.

I guess my point is that in the Trump wins scenarios, i believe the popular vote will heavily shift towards him. He could win PA, but I don't think he wins PA again but loses the popular vote by more. That just doesn't track with what we've seen in 2018 or the 2020 primaries.

sterlingice 10-29-2020 01:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3308855)
Just added it up. Unless I missed something, the "polling errors as bad as 2016" scenario is 335-203 Biden.



Even if you flip Georgia and Florida, which it has a 1% wins for Biden, it's still a 290-248 win for Biden. Even if he picks up Pennsylvania, it's 270-268 Biden and he has to pick up something like Arizona or Nevada.

SI

albionmoonlight 10-29-2020 01:03 PM

My (pessimistic) prediction:

Biden wins, but it is close enough that the GOP files some frivolous lawsuits in a few swing states.

Then, the "moderate" GOP Senators propose a "deal" for "the good of the country" in which they agree to accept the election results in exchange for enough Dem Senators to pledge to not reform the House, the Courts, or the Filibuster.

The Media JUMPS on this as SO REASONABLE. And all the ancient institutionalist Dem Senators readily agree.

The GOP then uses the filibuster to submarine the recovery. They gain control of the House and Senate in 2022 and the Presidency in 2024. At which point they eliminate the filibuster and expand the courts.

sterlingice 10-29-2020 01:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3308859)
My (pessimistic) prediction:

Biden wins, but it is close enough that the GOP files some frivolous lawsuits in a few swing states.

Then, the "moderate" GOP Senators propose a "deal" for "the good of the country" in which they agree to accept the election results in exchange for enough Dem Senators to pledge to not reform the House, the Courts, or the Filibuster.

The Media JUMPS on this as SO REASONABLE. And all the ancient institutionalist Dem Senators readily agree.

The GOP then uses the filibuster to submarine the recovery. They gain control of the House and Senate in 2022 and the Presidency in 2024. At which point they eliminate the filibuster and expand the courts.


Mitch: "Gawrsh - we're you reading my wish diary?"

SI

Lathum 10-29-2020 01:54 PM

Biden killing it at his Florida rally which is being broadcast on FOX News. I can't believe they haven't turned away from it, meanwhile Trump is busy at his rally calling Adam Schiff "watermelon" head.

GrantDawg 10-29-2020 02:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 3308833)
But the GOP may not be able to do a self-examination. They've awakened Trumpism and I'm not sure they'll be able to shut it down that quickly. There will be Trumpist candidates running in primaries in 2022 and 2024. If they win, not much the party elite can do about it.

I was listening to a podcast with Stuart Stevens and Steve Schmidt. Both Republicans working hard to defeat Trump. When asked when they believed the GOP will once again be the non-Trump party, Stevens said it will be after he dies. Schmidt said it would at the earliest be 12 years. The party has completely sold itself to a base that has no interest in ever being what it once was. Schmidt said he once held out hope someone like Nikki Hailey could turn the party around, but she like every other possible moderating hope sold out completely to Trump. There are very few states were an anti-Trump Republican could win a nomination. Even the few moderate governors in purplish states that have stood up to Trump, they have lost control of their local party. Schmidt said they aren't even allowed to name their state party chair, which governors normally do.

Even if we say Trump's 40% drops to 30% post blow-out loss, that will still be somewhere in the neighborhood of 65-75% of the Republican party full-on Trumpian. They are not going away, but hopefully we keep seeing them get weaker and weaker.

GrantDawg 10-29-2020 02:08 PM

Forward this to all your Republican friends to get the word out:

JPhillips 10-29-2020 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3308867)
I was listening to a podcast with Stuart Stevens and Steve Schmidt. Both Republicans working hard to defeat Trump. When asked when they believed the GOP will once again be the non-Trump party, Stevens said it will be after he dies. Schmidt said it would at the earliest be 12 years. The party has completely sold itself to a base that has no interest in ever being what it once was. Schmidt said he once held out hope someone like Nikki Hailey could turn the party around, but she like every other possible moderating hope sold out completely to Trump. There are very few states were an anti-Trump Republican could win a nomination. Even the few moderate governors in purplish states that have stood up to Trump, they have lost control of their local party. Schmidt said they aren't even allowed to name their state party chair, which governors normally do.

Even if we say Trump's 40% drops to 30% post blow-out loss, that will still be somewhere in the neighborhood of 65-75% of the Republican party full-on Trumpian. They are not going away, but hopefully we keep seeing them get weaker and weaker.


The best way to moderate the GOP is for the Dems to restore majority rule. The current GOP is only viable nationally because of the counter-majoritarian elements in the system. A conservative party can win in a majority rule system, but this version can't.

albionmoonlight 10-29-2020 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3308872)
The best way to moderate the GOP is for the Dems to restore majority rule. The current GOP is only viable nationally because of the counter-majoritarian elements in the system. A conservative party can win in a majority rule system, but this version can't.


Yes.

The goal should not be to destroy the GOP. The goal should not be one party rule.

The goal should be to enact structural reforms that make it impossible for any party to win with a MAGA platform. The goal should be to require each party to present credible solutions for people who live outside of rural areas.

If you make those changes, then the GOP will evolve and adapt and start winning elections again.

Butter 10-29-2020 02:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3308859)
My (pessimistic) prediction:

Biden wins, but it is close enough that the GOP files some frivolous lawsuits in a few swing states.

Then, the "moderate" GOP Senators propose a "deal" for "the good of the country" in which they agree to accept the election results in exchange for enough Dem Senators to pledge to not reform the House, the Courts, or the Filibuster.

The Media JUMPS on this as SO REASONABLE. And all the ancient institutionalist Dem Senators readily agree.

The GOP then uses the filibuster to submarine the recovery. They gain control of the House and Senate in 2022 and the Presidency in 2024. At which point they eliminate the filibuster and expand the courts.


This would be fine, because the extreme centrist Dems are not going to go for the abolishment of the filibuster and any extreme-ish type reforms. I mean, Feinstein was giving Lindsey Graham a hug after the Barrett hearings for fuck's sake, nobody trusts her or those of her ilk to end this ridiculous nightmare.

albionmoonlight 10-29-2020 02:50 PM

I mean, one candidate has a 9 point national lead, and we are all sweating the results. If this were happening in any other country, we'd call it a failed state.

ISiddiqui 10-29-2020 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3308875)
I mean, one candidate has a 9 point national lead, and we are all sweating the results. If this were happening in any other country, we'd call it a failed state.


I mean we kind of are a failed state.

Brian Swartz 10-29-2020 03:12 PM

To be frank, I think the sweating the results is irrational. There's always a remote chance of something you don't expect happening, but it's more people being afraid of Trump somehow winning than any rational expectation he would actually lose by 9 points and still win.

Butter 10-29-2020 03:12 PM

If there's one thing that the Trump presidency has shown us, it's that if a party wants to totally ratfuck the system, they really have no issues in doing so. Checks and balances are only as strong as the will of lawmakers and/or the justice system.

Brian Swartz 10-29-2020 03:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips
A conservative party can win in a majority rule system, but this version can't.


I don't think this is true anymore in America. Conservatism is dead.

JonInMiddleGA 10-29-2020 03:39 PM

Happy to report that my entire voting experience took 14 mins from driveway of the location to back in my car.

Lots of factors contributed to that success I think, including waiting until later in the early voting window, going in the early afternoon after a morning storm, and picking a location that might have a bit older average resident. Plus it's a relatively new building (part of a county complex with fire station, extension office, etc) so I banked on fewer people being sure where it was and going elsewhere.

JPhillips 10-29-2020 04:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3308879)
I don't think this is true anymore in America. Conservatism is dead.


Definitions matter, obviously, but a Canadian or Euro conservative party would do well in the U.S.

JPhillips 10-29-2020 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3308873)
Yes.

The goal should not be to destroy the GOP. The goal should not be one party rule.

The goal should be to enact structural reforms that make it impossible for any party to win with a MAGA platform. The goal should be to require each party to present credible solutions for people who live outside of rural areas.

If you make those changes, then the GOP will evolve and adapt and start winning elections again.


A lot of politicians will lose their jobs, but the party will be fine.

Brian Swartz 10-29-2020 04:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips
Definitions matter, obviously, but a Canadian or Euro conservative party would do well in the U.S.


Maybe, but that would be centrist at best compared to traditional US standards. It would not be palatable to a lot of people on the right in America even now.

RainMaker 10-29-2020 04:36 PM

Perdue pulled out of the last debate in Georgia. I don't know who wins this but I've never seen a person get owned this hard in a debate sequence in awhile. More Democrats need to be like this.


RainMaker 10-29-2020 04:37 PM

Conservatives in Canada are arguably to the left of the Democrats in this country.

JPhillips 10-29-2020 04:38 PM

Yes, but that's only because the system allows a far-right 45% of voters party to win consistently. If they had to get a majority, the candidates would present more moderate positions and eventually enough people would support them as the better alternative to the more liberal party.

ISiddiqui 10-29-2020 05:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3308885)
Definitions matter, obviously, but a Canadian or Euro conservative party would do well in the U.S.


They likely wouldn't have the same positions in the US that they would in Europe or Canada though. European and Canadian parties have to deal with that in the aftermath of WW2, liberal parties were able to go MUCH farther than in the US - the NHS in the UK was put in place when Churchill's Tories were swept from power after WW2, and then they couldn't get rid of it because people liked it too much (Churchill was never a fan of the NHS). There is also the issue that in the US, a lot of mass social programs were blocked because it may help the black folk, whereas European countries at the time were far more homogeneous.

A lot of these folks would be more than fine in a society that never instituted these systems. I think Boris & Co. in the UK would love to get rid of the NHS and replace it with a more private based system if they thought they could get away with it.

Ksyrup 10-29-2020 05:40 PM

I'm SHOCKED! Shocked I tell you!


JPhillips 10-29-2020 05:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3308896)
They likely wouldn't have the same positions in the US that they would in Europe or Canada though. European and Canadian parties have to deal with that in the aftermath of WW2, liberal parties were able to go MUCH farther than in the US - the NHS in the UK was put in place when Churchill's Tories were swept from power after WW2, and then they couldn't get rid of it because people liked it too much (Churchill was never a fan of the NHS). There is also the issue that in the US, a lot of mass social programs were blocked because it may help the black folk, whereas European countries at the time were far more homogeneous.

A lot of these folks would be more than fine in a society that never instituted these systems. I think Boris & Co. in the UK would love to get rid of the NHS and replace it with a more private based system if they thought they could get away with it.


Eventually, a conservative party would take positions to the right of the liberal party, but not so far right that they couldn't win a majority. All I'm really saying is that there is plenty of space between the current Trump cult and the Dems to fit a new, conservative party.

Ksyrup 10-29-2020 06:08 PM

McConnell must feel supremely confident of a win because he's pulled out an old Trump ad supporting him that I haven't seen in a long, long time. Most GOP, even in KY, aren't running on the "I love Trump and he loves me" message this time around.

larrymcg421 10-29-2020 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ksyrup (Post 3308904)
McConnell must feel supremely confident of a win because he's pulled out an old Trump ad supporting him that I haven't seen in a long, long time. Most GOP, even in KY, aren't running on the "I love Trump and he loves me" message this time around.


Actually, I'd say the opposite. If McGrath has a chance, she will have to convince some people to be split ticket voters (Trump/McGrath). Running ads with Trump tells me he's trying to prevent that from happening and may be slightly concerned.

Ksyrup 10-29-2020 06:22 PM

Maybe you're right, given Trump's relative popularity here. McGrath did run one ad with a Trump voter who was anti-McConnell which I didn't find to be all that great. I think her most effective ad was the one Rex Chapman did for her.

JPhillips 10-29-2020 08:22 PM

This shit is why Trump might still win.


stevew 10-29-2020 09:08 PM

Pa. Secretary Of State Wants All Counties To Start Counting Mail-In Ballots On Election Day – CBS Pittsburgh

refreshing to see "Each Pennsylvania county has a different plan for how to count mail-in ballots" as the sub headline

Also they have 5 days to complete count of the mail in ballots, so if it's even close I could see some red areas deliberately dragging all week to put up false hope of a win.

molson 10-29-2020 10:47 PM

Biden looks good in sunglasses, he should just utilize that look all the time.

stevew 10-29-2020 11:02 PM

The "Weekend at Bernie's" look?

ISiddiqui 10-29-2020 11:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molson (Post 3308925)
Biden looks good in sunglasses, he should just utilize that look all the time.


Yep. There is a reason there is Biden 2020 merch with just Aviators on them.

JonInMiddleGA 10-30-2020 07:25 AM

Maybe this article has been mentioned previously and I missed it, if so, sorry bout that.

I just thought it was a fun read for those who are wired for hypotheticals.

It's fivethirtyeight showing how 13 proposed but non-existent states (reconfigurations of existing territory) would have affected the 2016 presidential election. (Note: You have to use the pull down menu in the 2 maps it shows to see the other options, took me a minute to figure that out)

Ben E Lou 10-30-2020 08:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3308814)
89% :popcorn:

Still 89% today.

Kodos 10-30-2020 09:15 AM

That's about 11% too low for my liking.

PilotMan 10-30-2020 09:40 AM

The Economist has the presidency at 95% Biden, the house guaranteed, and the Senate at 83% probability to go Dem.

albionmoonlight 10-30-2020 09:56 AM

Number One Reason for Biden Hope:

The pollsters have all corrected for the methodology that got them to underestimate Trump vs. Clinton (i.e. underweighting non-college educated). And even with that correction, Biden still has a larger and more stable lead than Clinton ever did.

Number One Reason for Trump Hope:

All of the Midwestern states will have him ahead early b/c they (insanely) don't start counting early votes until election day. Because so many Dem voters have voted by mail and b/c it is still pretty close, Trump will be leading most (all?) of those on Wednesday morning with a ton of votes outstanding. At that point, he just needs 5 of the 6 conservative Justices to buy some wrong theory, and he's in.

albionmoonlight 10-30-2020 09:57 AM

dola:

And I am more than ready for NC, GA, and TX to start leaning blue so we can all stop obsessing over PA. Let PA go the way of Missouri and Ohio. Just paint it red and ignore it.

sterlingice 10-30-2020 09:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3308958)
dola:

And I am more than ready for NC, GA, and TX to start leaning blue so we can all stop obsessing over PA. Let PA go the way of Missouri and Ohio. Just paint it red and ignore it.


Sure, PA, but I think you misspelled FL

SI

albionmoonlight 10-30-2020 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sterlingice (Post 3308959)
Sure, PA, but I think you misspelled FL

SI


Heh.

FL is WAY too annoying to ever flip red or blue. It will frustrate us for the rest of our lives, constantly being just slightly redder than the county as a whole.

Thomkal 10-30-2020 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PilotMan (Post 3308954)
The Economist has the presidency at 95% Biden, the house guaranteed, and the Senate at 83% probability to go Dem.


Wow that's pretty crazy coming from a conservative magazine.

ISiddiqui 10-30-2020 10:41 AM

Well The Economist is far more Classic Liberal Conservative. So they hate everything Trump stands for aside from tax cuts ;).


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