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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2012 Republican Delegate Count: Newt gets a 2nd Super

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page.

No big change today, but DCW brings news that Gingrich has picked up another super delegate. Woo!

This of course slightly improves Gingrich’s position, slightly worsens everybody else’s, but in the end leaves things pretty much where they were.

The next major batch of delegates is still the Nevada caucuses on Saturday.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: After Florida

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page.

So Florida has played out exactly as it looked like it will for the last week or so. Gingrich’s brief spike in the polls after South Carolina subsided rapidly, and Romney won Florida handily. As a winner take all state (absent any contesting of the rules changing that in the future) the margin doesn’t matter though, Romney gets all 50 delegates from the state.

By our count this now gives Romney 82 delegates, or 65.1% of the delegates that have been determined so far. Gingrich is still in second, but way behind with 28 delegates, or 22.2% of the delegates.

From our preferred view above, you can see that this of course is very good for Romney, very bad for everybody else. He is now in a much better position than everybody else, and in the best position he has been in so far. He now only needs about 49.2% of the remaining delegates… compared to his record so far of 65.1% of the delegates. So he can actually do worse than he has been doing so far and still grab the nomination.

Every other candidate must significantly improve on their existing performances to catch up and win. For instance, Gingrich must win 51.7% of remaining delegates, which would be more than double his track record so far of 22.2%. Of course, winner take all states like Florida massively distort this sort of thing, but that is what we have with Florida, and this still shows the size of the mountain the other candidates would need to climb to get back into contention. Winning is not enough, they must start winning by very significant margins (not in popular vote, in delegates) in order to catch up. As we go on, this will get harder and harder.

Next up, the Nevada caucuses on Saturday… 28 delegates, proportional.

Curmudgeon’s Corner: Putting the Time into It

In the latest Curmudgeon’s Corner…

Sam and Ivan talk about:

  • Republicans
  • Twitter Censorship
  • MegaUpload
  • Electronics Manufacturing

Just click to listen now:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.abulsme.com/CurmudgeonsCorner/cc20120129.mp3″ text=”Recorded 29 Jan 2012″]

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2012 Republican Delegate Count: Some No Longer Super Supers

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page.

After a detailed examination of the rules, DCW determined that the super delegates from five states weren’t really as super as once thought, in that they will actually be bound by the elections in those states… so the declared opinions of those supers don’t matter any more. Net effect… 2 delegates that had previously been listed for Romney go away.

This of course is bad for Romney, good for everybody else (because at least in theory, those two delegates are now up for grabs). But really, it is a relatively small number of delegates, and doesn’t change the overall picture of the race on the eve of the Florida primary.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: Another Super for Romney

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page.

Just a minor update today, DCW adds another superdelegate for Romney. This of course puts Romney in a slightly better position, and everybody else in a slightly worse position.

All in all though, everything is just waiting for Florida…

Curmudgeon’s Corner: Spinning Wheels!

In the latest Curmudgeon’s Corner…

Sam and Ivan talk about:

  • Spam Fighting
  • Newt and Romney South Carolina
  • Newt and Romney Florida / General Election 2012

Just click to listen now:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.abulsme.com/CurmudgeonsCorner/cc20120122.mp3″ text=”Recorded 22 Jan 2012″]

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Electoral College: If it is Romney

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

Well, the time has come. I have put together my initial general election forecast. Now, since so far Romney has been the only one in the lead in my Republican Delegate Count Tracking this initial analysis is based on the assumption that this will be an Obama vs Romney race. If someone else, say, I don’t know, Gingrich, would take a lead in my delegate count at some point in the future, I’ll produce a new analysis based on that pairing. For now though, we assume a Romney nomination.

Bottom line at the moment… Obama is in a better position than Romney. If everybody won the states where my polling average indicates they are even slightly ahead, Obama wins by 315 to 223. But there are 12 states that at the moment should be considered too close to call. If Romney were to win all 12 of those states, he would win 327 to 211. If Obama were to win all 12 of those states, he would win 368 to 170. (For reference, 2008’s final result was Obama 365, McCain 173, so at the moment Obama’s best case is just slightly better than his 2008 result.)

For details on the methodology I am using, please see the full 2012 Electoral College Prediction page. It isn’t the most sophisticated analysis method out there, others such as HorsesAss.org are doing more complex things such as Monte Carlo simulations based on current polling, etc. As we get closer to November, there will be dozens of sites doing different sorts of modeling and predicting possible results in different ways. I hope mine provides a slightly different view which is useful or interesting to at least a few people.

The main item that is different with what I show than what I’ve seen other places is my method of showing the evolving race over time. In 2008, that chart ended up looking like this:

(More on the 2008 analysis can be found at the 2008 Electoral College Prediction page.)

In the 2008 chart above, the lower the lines were, the better off Obama was doing, the higher the lines, the better off McCain was. The nice thing here though is you can see the ebb and flow of the race over the course of the year. So you can tell McCain was doing well in the Spring, then sometime in May he was no longer the favorite to win, and with the exception of a few days right around the Republican convention, he was never ahead again. Then soon after the conventions were all over, McCain just collapsed and by the time we got to October, it was clear that it would take something remarkable happening for him to pull off a win.

Anyway, for 2012 I’ve redone some of the details of how this chart is constructed, hopefully improving readability and intuitiveness. We don’t have all that much data or action yet so far, things are just beginning after all, but here it is:

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

This time up is better for Obama, down is better for Romney.

The two wobbles on the center line so far are Florida flipping from Leaning Romney to Leaning Obama on January 9th, and North Carolina flipping from Leaning Obama to Leaning Romney on January 12th.

Since this is the first post of the year for this model, I’ll include here the full explanation of how to interpret this chart:

First of all, the current state of the race for each state (or congressional districts as well in the cases of Maine and Nebraska) is determined by looking at the average margin between the candidates in the last five polls in that area. In cases where five polls are not yet available, the final popular vote results in the 2004 and 2008 elections were used to “seed” the data.

States are then put into 3 categories.

  • Lean: 0% ≤ Candidate Lead < 5%
  • Weak: 5% ≤ Candidate Lead < 10%
  • Strong: Candidate Lead ≥ 10%

All “lean” states are for all intents and purposes too close to call, but for the chart above, we separate them.

The chart is divided into two halves.

  • Above the green line, the Democrat is winning with X more electoral votes than they need to tie. (So 269+X = their electoral vote total)
  • Below the green line, the Republican is winning with X more electoral votes than they need to tie. (So 269+X = their electoral vote total)

We show five lines, outlining five different scenarios showing the range of possibilities given the current polling.

  • Light Blue Line – The Democrat wins all states they are ahead in, but also flips the Republican’s Lean and Weak states.
  • Dark Blue Line – The Democrat wins all states they are ahead in, but also flips the Republican’s Lean states.
  • Purple Line – Each candidate wins the states they are ahead in, no states flip.
  • Dark Red Line – The Republican wins all states they are ahead in, but also flips the Democrat’s Lean states.
  • Light Red Line – The Republican wins all states they are ahead in, but also flips the Democrats Lean and Weak states.

We assume that states where a candidate is “Strong” have essentially no chance of flipping.

The light lines would represent a very unlikely sweep with a candiate massively exceeding what polling would indicate in a large number of states at the same time.

But “Lean” states are essentially all too close to call, in that a 5% lead is small enough that it can easily be affected by natural random variations in polls, or even excluding those sorts of effects, a 5% move in opinion is easily possible in just a few days given particularly effective campaigning by one candidate, or a particularly bad gaffe by the other, or simply by the effects of the news cycle. So essentially anything between the dark blue and dark red lines should be considered to be quite possible given the current state of polling, although of course results closer to the purple line (representing the actual current state of polling) are more likely than results close to the dark red or dark blue lines.

Edit 2012 May 30 15:53 UTC – Since this was posted, I was made aware of more older polls that should have resulted in New Hampshire starting off as a “Weak Romney” state instead of a “Lean Romney” state. The time series charts are corrected as of May 30. Further details of the New Hampshire correction are also located in that post.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: Newt Dominates South Carolina

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page.

Pulling ahead in just the last few days before the South Carolina Primary, Gingrich won a commanding victory in South Carolina. Although the congressional district level results won’t be final for awhile now, it looks like Gingrich will end up with 23 of South Carolina’s 25 delegates. Romney gets the remaining 2 delegates, plus he picked up another superdelegate since our last update.

Fundamentally, looking at our “% of Remaining Delegates needed to win” chart gives the same story that is the big narrative tonight. This was a very bad day for Romney. Romney is still in the best position to win. He is still ahead in delegates. (33 Romney delegates to Gingrich’s 28 by our count which uses data from both The Green Papers and Democratic Convention Watch.) But now instead of being way off on his own, with a much better position than all of his competitors, who were getting worse off by the day, he is now joined by Gingrich, who has broken out of the pack of “not-Romneys” and is now nipping at Romney’s heels. Meanwhile, Paul and Santorum fall even further behind since they got no delegates at all out of South Carolina.

The next big contest is Florida of course, with 50 delegates at stake. Florida is a winner take all state. If Romney wins Florida, he pulls WAY ahead again, and pushes Gingrich back into the background. If Gingrich wins, then he suddenly will take a fairly significant lead himself, and we will need to start taking a much closer look at the rest of the calendar…

Since this was a big day, two other views as well… first the race as % of delegates captured so far…

Romney had been over 50% for a little while. No longer.

And finally, the plain old “Total Delegates” chart…

Gingrich’s good night is particularly striking in this last one, but I think it actually makes it look like a better night than it really was.

I think the first of these three charts is the most indicative of where the race really stands, but the other two are interesting views as well. But looking at % needed to win really gives you a sense of how close we are (or not) to wrapping things up. Numbers close to 50 as we have today still indicate a lot is possible. As we get candidates starting to head rapidly toward 100 (where they are mathematically eliminated) or starting to dive down toward zero (where they cinch the nomination) we will see very clearly the state of the race.

Out of the billowing smoke emerged Gingrich

Brendan Loy is right, it is time to watch and read this again.

The good part starts 2:30 into the video.

Lithgow does Newt (on Colbert) from wally danger on Vimeo.

The literati sent out their minions to do their bidding. Washington cannot tolerate threats from outsiders who might disrupt their comfortable world. The firefight started when the cowardly sensed weakness. They fired timidly at first, then the sheep not wanting to be dropped from the establishment’s cocktail party invite list unloaded their entire clip, firing without taking aim their distortions and falsehoods. Now they are left exposed by their bylines and handles. But surely they had killed him off. This is the way it always worked. A lesser person could not have survived the first few minutes of the onslaught. But out of the billowing smoke and dust of tweets and trivia emerged Gingrich, once again ready to lead those who won’t be intimated by the political elite and are ready to take on the challenges America faces.

Not so funny now, huh? Oh wait, yeah, it still is.

Gingrich Spike

BTW, this is totally nuts.

Chart from TPM. Chart links to full article: Rumblings on the Newtrizon by Josh Marshall.