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politics and politicians Title: Almost Every Swing State Is A ‘Must Win’ For Trump Now: But if the race tightens, that will change The impact of the three presidential debates particularly the first has borne itself out in the polls in many ways. Hillary Clinton won the first debate decisively, jumped out to a 5 or 6 percentage point lead nationally, according to the FiveThirtyEight polls-only model, and hasnt dropped below that threshold since. As a result, Donald Trumps options in the Electoral College have been significantly narrowed; Clintons have proliferated. You can see Trumps deteriorating map clearly by looking at how our must win numbers have shifted. A week before the first debate, both Trump and Clinton had certain must win states. That is, according to our polls-only model, there were a number of swing states (as indicated by our tipping-point calculation) where Clinton and Trump won the election in the vast majority of cases where they won that state. All values are percentages. FiveThirtyEight polls-only forecast as of Sept. 19. Before the first debate, our forecast showed Clinton winning the election more than 90 percent of the time she was able to defeat Trump in Florida and North Carolina, for example. Trump was forecasted to beat Clinton about 90 percent of the time when he won in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Put another way, Florida and North Carolina are slightly red-leaning states, so if Trump loses them, hes most likely losing the election. Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are light blue, so if Clinton is losing there, shes likely to lose overall. Youll further note that Clintons percentage chance of winning the election if she won a certain state generally ran close to Trumps in the aggregate. Across these 14 states, Clintons chance of winning the election if she won a given state averaged 83 percent. Trumps chance of winning the election averaged 79 percent. That was indicative of a relatively tight race, with Clinton having a slight advantage. Now take a look at these same 14 states as they stand with 11 days to Election Day. Clintons chances of winning the election if she wins a given swing state average 92 percent. Trump averages only 60 percent. All values are percentages. FiveThirtyEight polls-only forecast as of 11 a.m. on Oct. 28 Source: FiveThirtyEight Polls-only forecast This decline for Trump tells us that theres no magic bullet for him in terms of the electoral map anymore. Clinton has many more paths to victory. She can afford to lose any of these 14 states and still have somewhere between a 21 percent and 64 percent chance of winning. Theres not a single state now where Trump wins the Electoral College in at least 80 percent of the simulations if he wins that state. Back in September, Trump won at least 90 percent of our simulations if he won anyone of three states: Michigan, Minnesota or Wisconsin. Trump now has five states, on the other hand, that if he doesnt win, he loses the election 95 percent of the time or more. Some of these are generally understood to be states more friendly to him, such as Iowa and Ohio. They also include, however, Florida and North Carolina where he is currently trailing in most of the polling. Clinton actually still wins in a majority of our simulations in which she loses one of these. This difference between what winning either of these states means for Clinton and Trump is something you should keep in mind going forward. Florida and North Carolina are important not because Trumps winning them means hes going to win the election. Rather, Florida and North Carolina are important because a Trump victory in either of them indicates that we have a more competitive race nationally. A loss by Trump in either one probably means the polls are right, and Clinton is going to win the election. But comparing Trumps and Clintons must-win numbers from before the first debate and now also illustrates a danger for Clinton. Trump has few paths in the Electoral College because hes losing nationally by 5 or 6 percentage points, not because theres anything inherent about the map that favors Clinton. Almost all the swing states are now must win for him, but if the race tightens, that will change. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: ConservingFreedom (#0)
The polls are bullshit. The third party voters will mostly vote for Trump. The broken former middle class will vote for Trump. He'll win Michigan and Ohio. The blacks won't come out en masse and vote for Hillary. Trump will win Virginia and North Carolina and Florida. And it's all over. He'll whip her ass, and the Republicans will hold Congress. She hit her high water mark, in the polls, but now it all ebbs away. They did their worst, it was not enough, and now the country - sick of her and sick of the status quo, sick of the manipulation, sick of uncontrolled immigration, well and truly sick of it all - are going to Trump up there to rip them all a new asshole. It's coming, and it will be a beautiful thing.
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