This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

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@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-10 (UTC)

  • Someone from high school and her dog. I gave a little. Reading – Bailey the Beagle needs your help! (Heather Neider) is.gd/2ruye2
  • Reading – The iPad Is Unbeatable (Farhad Manjoo)mobile.slate.com/articles/techn…
  • Reading – The Revenge of Santorum Can’t Get to 1144 (Josh Putnam) frontloading.blogspot.com/2012/03/reveng…
  • Reading – The Frontrunner and His Rivals (Ross Douthat)is.gd/A82Gqa
  • Reading – Senate Gridlock Explained in One Chart (Dino Grandoni)is.gd/0w2DA5
  • Reading – What the New iPad means for Apple rivals: “No Air.” (Jeff Yang) originalspin.posterous.com/what-the-new-i…
  • RT @ZekeJMiller: RT @shushwalshe: Romney has won the Guam caucuses, ABC News reports.
  • MT @freesyria74: Can the ICC explain what did Qaddafi have that Assad doesn’t? Assad should be charged with crimes against humanity
  • RT @FHQ: RT @feliciasonmez: Mitt Romney wins all 9 Guam delegates, his campaign just announced #guamination
  • RT @FHQ: So just for the record, with the delegate sweep in Guam, it is worth more to Romney than Oklahoma was to Santorum.
  • RT @RichardA: Winning Guam will finally silence critics who say Romney can’t connect with Western Pacific Ocean voters
  • Reading – Guam Goes for Romney (Josh Putnam)frontloading.blogspot.com/2012/03/guam-g…
  • MT @FHQ: Out of a pool of 16 candidates, 6 delegates were chosen in N. Marianas. ow.ly/1I6Fr3 All for Romney +3 automatic delegates.
  • Reading – On the genre of “Raising Awareness about Someone Else’s Suffering.” (zunguzungu) is.gd/OsRiWJ
  • Reading – How to Write about Africa (Binyavanga Wainaina)is.gd/senY1G
  • Reading – Daylight saving time — still mostly a scam (Brad Plumer)is.gd/NaNCtq
  • RT @tmbg: people adapting Dr. Suess need to stop trying to “fix it”
  • RT @shadihamid: Hadn’t seen this — Panetta says NATO should start debating military intervention in #Syria: bit.ly/A3C6o4
  • RT @FHQ: In NV today: MT @ralstonflash: Paul campaign estimates 50-60% of delegates here are theirs. May be as many as 2,500 attendees.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Rather than the date on the x-axis, we show the “% of Delegates Already Allocated” as this better represents the progress through the race. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

This is the kind of day the not-Romneys wish wouldn’t happen. It is the kind of day that starts taking even the possibility of keeping Romney from getting to 1144 off the table. It highlights Romney’s superior organization and money by letting him get delegates somewhere the others probably hadn’t even thought of competing.

Neither Guam nor the Northern Mariana Islands were technically winner take all. There had been no polling at all. But when all was said and done, support for Romney here was overwhelming (actually unanimous in the small Guam Caucus) and it ended up effectively winner take all. Officially the delegates from these contests are supposed to be uncommitted, but in both locations, the result was made clear. Out of these two locations Romney gets 12 regular delegates. Also 6 super delegates from these locations also are now in the Romney column. Plus, one super delegate from the Virgin Islands also came out for Romney. That makes Romney’s take for the day a 19 delegate gain, while all other candidates were shut out completely.

So Romney’s “% of remaining needed to win” drops from 48.4% to 47.7%. Meanwhile Santorum as the closest competition goes from needing 65.5% to needing 66.4%. Santorum and the others continue to race toward mathematical elimination with each contest. Romney isn’t “racing” toward cinching the nomination yet, but he is making steady progress in that direction now. Some of the Southern states coming up may slow or reverse that process in the short term, but it getting increasingly hard to game out scenarios where Romney does not eventually get to 1144. It is just a question of how long it takes.

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-09 (UTC)

  • Absolutely awesome. => Reading – The Personal Analytics of My Life (Stephen Wolfram) http://t.co/WPZAAA8r #
  • Reading – One super PAC takes aim at incumbents of any party (Paul Kane) http://t.co/Jjmymxcj #
  • Reading – The President Should Finally Fight For Civil Liberties (Jeffrey Rosen) http://t.co/n2pjgr20 #
  • Reading – Democrats Pretend Not To Be Mad About Maine (Kyle Leighton) http://t.co/wM3QpHbg #
  • Reading – Mitt: Pay for Your Own Damn College! (Jonathan Chait) http://t.co/V1G6oZal #
  • RT @cpreksta: Prayers for the victims of the shootings at Western Psych, Pittsburgh and the doctors & nurses helping them this moment :( #
  • Reading – Rick Santorum’s delegate woes (Felicia Sonmez) http://t.co/FEgydrAk #
  • RT @ppppolls: Romney leading on first night of our NC GOP poll…that seems to me like a real sign this thing might be ready to wrap up #
  • RT @ppppolls: Looks like about a 10 point shift from Santorum to Romney in NC even just in the last week #
  • RT @ppppolls: Romney has historically done very poorly in our North Carolina polling…if he's winning here now he's winning most everywhere #
  • MT @daveweigel: If 3 of 'em crack 20, major delegate split RT @justin_hart: Ras Reports: Alabama: Gingrich 20%, Santorum 29%, Romney 28% #
  • MT @LarrySabato: If a few extra delegates for Romney are needed, party elites will find a way to get them. #
  • Oh, I'm @ doc waiting for strep throat test results. Also headache, earache, fever, etc. Woo! Haven't felt "good" in weeks. Bleh. #sickday #
  • RT @OreoDCW: @MittRomney: Way down yonder on the Chatahoochee it gets hotter than a hoochee coochie #itsmittyall #
  • Reading – Romney official: Winning Alabama would 'end this process' (Alexander Burns) http://t.co/xvo61Dta #
  • Reading – The Ridiculous Trick AT&T; And Apple Are Playing On iPhone 4S Owners (Steve Kovach) http://t.co/yL2WzTLz #
  • RT @BrendanNyhan: RT @kinggary: daylight saving time causes more traffic accidents and a 5% increase in heart attacks http://t.co/j6sAAmjy #
  • RT @FHQ: AL/MS are perception contests in this 2012 GOP nomination race. Delegate counts will not differ much no matter who wins. 1/2 #
  • RT @fivethirtyeight: 3 Alabama polls, 3 different leaders. 2 Mississippi polls, 2 different leaders. Polling the Deep South is a mess. #
  • Reading – Because it will give me an excuse to buy and own and wear an ascot. (Wil Wheaton) http://t.co/RhFd7MBv #
  • @ppppolls On Maine poll, no breakdown by CD? (Relevant since ME & NE can split electoral vote by CD… not that it is likely in ME.) #
  • @RasmussenPoll Any breakdown by CD on NE Obama/Romney poll? Relevant due to ability to split electoral college by CD in November. #

Electoral College: Maine (at large) goes Dark Blue

Map from the Abulsme.com 2012 Electoral College Prediction page. This map reflects Obama vs Romney. If any other candidate takes the lead in the Republican delegate race we’ll switch to making maps for them.

So the latest poll in Maine (the first since October) puts our “last five poll average” up an Obama lead of 12.1%, so the state moves from our light blue color (indicating a 5% to 10% lead) to dark blue (indicating a lead over 10%). Obama won Maine in 2008 by over 17%, so this isn’t a huge surprise.

This is for the whole state though. Maine is one of two states (the other is Nebraska) that allocate some of their electoral votes based on the state wide vote, but some of them by the winners in each congressional district. We have no polling yet for the individual congressional districts in Maine, so they are colored in by the average of the results in 2004 and 2008. So we classify ME-1 as Strong Obama (lead over 10%) and ME-2 as Weak Obama (lead between 5% and 10%).

In practice these states have almost never split their vote, but it does happen sometimes… Nebraska split its vote in 2008… so we have to allow for the possibility in our model.

Since this change does not effect a swing state, our summary remains the same:

Romney Obama
Romney Best Case 291 247
Current Status 210 328
Obama Best Case 159 379

And our chart over time…

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Electoral College Prediction page.

In the last month there have been 8 state category changes. 6 of them have gone in Obama’s direction. It will be awhile until the state by state polls are frequent enough and in enough states to be quickly responsive to the state of the race, but from the polling we do have, it is apparent that the continuing Republican primary battle seems to be slowly but surely weakening Romney’s hand against Obama. The expectation is that once Romney can pivot to the general election, he’ll be able to start trying to reverse that tide. But until then, he seems to just continue to lose ground.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: More Super Tuesday Results

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Rather than the date on the x-axis, we show the “% of Delegates Already Allocated” as this better represents the progress through the race. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

So it appears that the last 34 delegates from Super Tuesday, a handful each from Georgia, Ohio and Tennessee, have been determined. 17 more to Romney, 8 more to Gingrich and 5 more to Santorum. But wait, that is only 30! Well, according to Green Papers, 4 of the 63 delegates that were up for grabs in Ohio end up officially “Uncommitted”, which (I think) means we won’t actually know which way they may go until we know which actual human beings end up being those delegates and those people say publicly who they plan on supporting (which they may or may not actually do before the convention).

All in all, today’s results are once again a win for Romney. He got 56.7% of today’s delegates, which was way more than the 48.5% he needed to continue to move closer to the nomination rather than further way. His “% of remaining needed to win” drops now to 48.4%. For the other candidates, the effect on the other side is more dramatic. Santorum is still in 2nd place, but his “% of remaining needed to win” moves up from 64.5% to 65.5%. Romney may not yet be rapidly moving toward cinching the nomination, but the non-Romneys are rapidly moving toward being mathematically eliminated.

Looking at the non-Romney’s for a minute, the next few states are expected to favor them. Perhaps Santorum will win some. Perhaps Gingrich will win some. But to actually be on a pace to win, Santorum has to not just win a state, but win by a huge margin, getting more than 65.5% of the delegates. For Gingrich it is even worse, he would need to win getting 67.8% of the delegates. (For completeness, Paul would need to get more than 71.7%.)

Even with Romney expected to not be strong in these states, with four candidates in the race, you don’t expect anybody to be able to pull that kind of level except in winner take all (or winner take almost-all) states. Of the next few coming up… in Kansas, Guam, Northern Marianas, Virgin Islands, Alabama, Mississippi, Hawaii and American Samoa there are as usual complicated delegate rules (and the territories might only select uncommitted delegates), but none of them are straight up winner takes all. (Some allow for certain situations that could lead there though.) Bottom line, 65.5% (or more) is a pretty big ask and seems unlikely.

Which means that even if Santorum or Gingrich win some states (as expected) in terms of delegates they will almost certainly still both be heading closer to mathematical elimination rather than closer to the nomination. The big thing to look at will once again be looking at how well the non-Romney’s collectively block Romney from getting the 48.4% of the delegates he needs to be closing in on the nomination himself. With strong performance by the non-Romney’s in the next few contests, they may well be able to achieve this, even if they don’t actually help themselves individually.

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-08 (UTC)

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-07 (UTC)

  • VA too close to call? Really??? #
  • Ok. That is better. What took so long? (CNN calls VA for Romney) #
  • RT @joshtpm: CNN currently showing horrible visualization called "virtual convention". Someone hold me. I'm scared. #
  • RT @googlepolitics: Our #SuperTuesday map with real-time @AP results is up & ready for action http://t.co/1rGp292C #
  • MT @Kimsfirst: @LarrySabato reason 4 delay VA call: 3d wave exit poll data showed Romney lead in low single digits. Decision desks noticed. #
  • RT @CNBC: NBC News source: Newt Gingrich to start receiving Secret Service protection tomorrow. #
  • RT @daveweigel: That SCREEECH sound you hear is reporters canceling trips to other primaries. #over #
  • RT @BuzzFeedAndrew: Ohio polls close. CNN exit polls shows Romney winning 40% to 36% over Santorum. #
  • Reading – Poll Analysis: Santorum improves, Obama still leads (Darryl, HorsesAss) http://t.co/KWSEsGN1 #
  • RT @davidfrum: This is not looking like the Romney blow-out it needs to be. #
  • RT @jbplainblog: Really doesn't need to be RT @davidfrum: This is not looking like the Romney blow-out it needs to be. #
  • RT @mattyglesias: Who's going to make up some new reason that the GOP nomination isn't over yet? #
  • RT @RollCallAbby: Brilliant producing CNN/Team Feist with the @SarahPalinUSA get #
  • RT @RealClearScott: Roger Ailes, call your office. #PalinOnCNN #
  • Reading – Poll Analysis: Obama has solid lead over Romney (Darryl, HorsesAss) http://t.co/oj1xhVVa #
  • Reading – Would Democrats have supported extrajudicial killings under Attorney General John Ashcroft? (Ezra Klein) http://t.co/F0ywfJRm #
  • RT @FHQ: Please stop with the "Romney needs a blow out" mumbo jumbo. Delegates, delegates, delegates. #supertuesday #
  • RT @DemConWatch: Romney rubs it in, adds new superdelegate from MT. Romney 19, Gingrich 3, Santorum 2, Paul 1 http://t.co/pRyYtacs #
  • MT @FHQ: More things change, the more they stay the same: Candidates win where expected & Romney's del lead grows. #supertuesday #
  • RT @AntDeRosa: Newt Gingrich will hunt you down and debate you Lincoln style #
  • RT @daveweigel: Romney has won all 11 of Virginia's districts, will get all 49 delegates #
  • MT @FHQ: 46. 3 of those are unbound automatic delegates. @daveweigel: Romney has won all of Virginia's districts, will get all 49 delegates #
  • RT @daveweigel: Oops: Don't trust me! Paul wins VA-03! 3 delegates for Ron Paul, 46 for Mitt #
  • RT @DemConWatch: 43 for Mitt. 3 Supers RT @daveweigel: Oops: Don't trust me! Paul wins VA-03! 3 delegates for Ron Paul, 46 for Mitt #
  • 17 min for me RT @daveweigel: Expecting it to take a half hour or so for people to notice I corrected my VA-03 goof #
  • Watching – The Most Astounding Fact – Neil DeGrasse Tyson (MaxSchlick) http://t.co/qC0ty2Mr #
  • RT @Redistrict: Surprisingly weak showings for Romney in major metro OH precincts…things looking great for Santorum at this point. #
  • RT @daveweigel: This Saturday, Santorum wins Kansas and Someone Who Isn't Romney wins MS/AL. Woohoo! #
  • Woo? RT @daveweigel: I think Randall Terry actually gets a delegate from OK-2. He's at 26% to Obama's 42% #
  • MT @Taniel: In terms of del count, whether Santorum crosses 20% in GA is more important – and more suspensful at moment – than who wins OH. #
  • MT @FHQ: Yowsa! Romney picks up an actual delegate to the convention in WY (Laramie Co) by just 2 votes over Santorum http://t.co/Emp5M5Nx #
  • RT @FHQ: Ohio, meh. Close win, close loss = delegate win for Romney. http://t.co/CPquPjrU #SuperTuesday #
  • Reading – Updated Apple TV with 1080p Video Support to Maintain $99 Price Tag (Eric Slivka) http://t.co/zimtPRRf #
  • RT @blakehounshell: Sounds like we're headed for a recount in Ohio. #
  • RT @BuzzFeedAndrew: Rick Perry now is up to 6,108 votes in Ohio. More than three times the difference between Santorum and Romney. #
  • MT @chucktodd: NBC delegate projection has Romney up to 217, which wd translate to a majority of all deleagates avail tonight. #
  • RT @RyanLizza: The big delegate haul Romney will get from MA, ID, and VA seems to be an under-reported story. #
  • RT @fivethirtyeight: Santorum Falling Just Short of Ga. Delegate Threshold http://t.co/ZSPZB76f #
  • RT @alexlundry: RT @presjpolk: Mitt Romney laughs all the way to the delegate bank as people wax on about narratives. #
  • MT @FHQ: Keeping Romney from 1144 argument will work as long as Santorum/Gingrich keep winning (the South) http://t.co/AzkwNU7z #
  • MT @DemConWatch: AP Projection RT @HotlineJosh: RT @dandrezner: This. RT @ZekeJMiller: NYT projecting Romney wins 17 del in OH, Santorum 9. #
  • Reading – The iPad HD Sucks (MG Siegler) http://t.co/dKPqGSO1 #
  • RT @MysteryPollster: So Romney won the most votes, states, delegates, the "key" state (OH) and grew delegate lead by ~ 125. Not a bad night. #
  • RT @EdEspinoza: MS primary 3/13: if a candidate wins over 50%, delegates become winner-take-all. Could be a much needed bump for Santorum. #
  • RT @KattyKayBBC: Mitt Romney's favorability rating is even lower than Bob Dole's at this stage. I didn't know that was even possible. #

2012 Republican Delegate Count: First Round of Super Tuesday Results

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Rather than the date on the x-axis, we show the “% of Delegates Already Allocated” as this better represents the progress through the race. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

So, Super Tuesday happened. As of this update, Green Papers has “called” 385 of the 419 delegates available from the Super Tuesday contests. There are 34 delegates that haven’t been determined yet that will result in updates later, but of the ones we do know, the estimates for Super Tuesday contests are: Romney 208, Santorum 84, Gingrich 72, Paul 21. Romney also picked up a Superdelegate, bringing the total for the day to Romney 209, Santorum 84, Gingrich 72, Paul 21.

Compared to the Sabato Crystal Ball projections which we used to game out Super Tuesday over the weekend, Romney performed better than expectations, as did Gingrich. Santorum and Paul underperformed compared to those predictions. In any case, where does this put us…

Bottom line, Romney is the big winner today, and this may be the start of him actually pulling away and heading toward the nomination, but he is still not out of the woods in terms of the danger of being blocked from 1144. Lets look at the details.

The situation for Santorum, Gingrich and Paul is essentially what I mapped out in the gaming Super Tuesday post. To paraphrase what I said there, it is now absolutely undeniably clear (although the trend was obvious even before today) that none of these three guys are on a path to the nomination. Of the three, Santorum is doing the best, but with today’s numbers, to be on a path to win, he would need to now get 64.5% of the remaining delegates, compared to the 21.1% he has gotten so far. For this to even come into the realm of possibility, Gingrich and Paul would both have to stop getting delegates, Santorum would have to pick up all of their support, AND something would need to happen to cause support for Romney to plummet. This is a very unlikely sequence of events. It isn’t going to happen.

Oh, I guess I should also note that Gingrich pulled back ahead of Paul for 3rd place.

The remaining question is: “Are the non-Romney’s collectively still in a position to potentially block Romney from getting to 1144?” If after today, Romney was under 50% of the total delegates, and his “% of remaining needed to win” was heading upward or flat, this is a possibility that would be looking like it was still very much in play. But Romney exceeded the 49.7% of delegates he needed in order to be on track toward 1144, and did it by a decent margin. Of the delegates in today’s total, he picked up 209 of 386, or 54.1%. This reduced his “% of remaining needed to win” from 49.7% to 48.5%. That means to block, the non-Romney’s collectively need to be getting 51.5% of the delegates, compared to the 46.9% they have managed so far. So they have to do better than they have been so far, and by a non-trivial margin. And they have do do this even though it is obvious none of them can win outright. It has to be about stopping Romney.

Now, the rest of March has a bunch of states that are supposed to be relatively good for the non-Romneys. So the non-Romney’s managing to get 51.5% in the next few state is very much within the realm of possibility. After that we hit more Romney friendly states in April. The thing to watch for in the upcoming states is not who wins the popular vote, or even the delegate count. The question will be: “Is Romney continuing to get enough delegates to avoid being blocked?” Right now, that magic number is 48.2%. As long as he is getting 48.2% of the delegates (or more) then he is marching his way toward the nomination. If he gets less than that, then blocking will remain possible a little bit longer. If the rest of March really is friendly to the non-Romneys, we may see that Romney’s “% needed to win” starts heading back up a bit before Romney hits friendly states again and starts fully pulling away. As long as we see that happening, blocking Romney is still a possibility. And indeed, if Romney is damaged by the contests in March and his April states start looking not so good after all, then blocking starts looking more real again.

But Romney’s “% of remaining needed to win” is the smallest it has been so far, and none of the other candidates have realistic shots at winning, only a shot at blocking that relies on them continuing to win delegates even though it is obvious they can’t win, so Romney is in a pretty good position right now. Watch that line though. Until it starts heading downward decisively, Romney hasn’t got it wrapped up just yet.

So what is next? Well, first, the last 34 delegates from Super Tuesday (they are from Georgia, Ohio and Tennessee). Then on Sunday we have Kansas (40), Guam (9), Northern Marianas (9), Virgin Islands (9). Then Tuesday we have Alabama (50), Mississippi (40), Hawaii (20), American Samoa (9). And then it goes on and on…

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-06 (UTC)

Curmudgeon’s Corner: Did You Get Him a Drum Set?

In the latest Curmudgeon’s Corner…

Sam and Ivan talk about:

  • WA Caucuses
  • Super Tuesday Predictions
  • Human Computer Interactions / Data Speeds and Usage

Just click to listen now:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.abulsme.com/CurmudgeonsCorner/cc20120304.mp3″ text=”Recorded 4 Mar 2012″]

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