Politicker

Rasmussen on Nevada: McCain Has Edge Over Obama

Posted by E!! on August 14, 2008
2008 Elections, Barack Obama, Blogs of Nevada, John McCain / 1 Comment

Rasmussen now has McCain 45% vs. Obama @ 42% in Nevada.  See their chart (below) to see the gains and losses since February.

Nevada Trends: McCain vs. Obama

 

Date McCain Obama
08/11/2008 45% 42%
07/16/2008 40% 42%
06/18/2008 45% 42%
05/20/2008 46% 40%
04/21/2008 48% 43%
03/19/2008 41% 45%
02/12/2008 38% 50%

How big is Nevada for the candidates?  Politicker’s Pindell Report lists Nevada as the most competitive (closest) toss up state in the nation.

Rasmussen reminds us that Nevada has cast its five Electoral College votes for the winning candidate in seven straight presidential elections. And the last four of these were very competitive with nobody carrying the state by more than four percent of the popular vote.

This year is shaping up to be another squeaker – for somebody. 

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The Making of a Blog Post: Politicker’s Pindell Report

Posted by E!! on August 12, 2008
2008 Elections, Blogs of Nevada / No Comments

 

A friend recently asked if I jot down all my bloggy ideas as they come to me and then type them up later.  The answer is Yes, I have between two and twenty scraps of paper shoved in my purse or pocket at any given time and/or I type reminders in a Word doc if I’m at a PC when inspiration comes.  One of this morning’s looked like this:

 

Check out Pindell Reprt on Politicker.  If poor, slam for sub-title “dynamic and deeply reported” – WTF does that MEAN?  If good, give props.  Also, email webmaster re: typo on About page.

 

And the result is something like this:

 

Today’s Pindell Report has Nevada as most the closely contested swing state in the nation. 

 

The report ranks and re-ranks races by competitiveness, so the race ranked first will be won by the smallest margin of victory and the race ranked last is believed to promise the largest margin.  The report’s About page says it takes into account polling, fundraising, past election data, demographic changes, interviews with the nation’s top political strategists, and Politicker.com’s reporters out in the field.  The rankings are evaluated daily to ensure they’re current.

 

Seems like a good system to me, and I like the little “+2” and “-4” notations to show whether the race rose or fell on the list.  (Make sure to click on the Senate, House, Governor and Presidential tabs to see all rankings for all races.)

 

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