Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Back to the Midwest

Ah, the Deep South creates primary problems for Mitt Romney and today (probably) the Midwest will make him look inevitable again.

last week's primaries in Alabama and Mississippi stalled for at least the moment, the claim that Newt Gingrich and/or Rick Santorum should drop out of the Republican primaries. Actually, with only second placings in both states, New Gingrich should have considered dropping out as he now has no reasonable path to the nomination. But that isn't why Newt is running and perhaps never has been. Newt said last week that he is in it for the duration, and I believe that no amount of third and fourth place finishes in the upcoming primaries will deter him from that manifest destiny.

However, for the benefit of the Romney camp, today is the Illinois primary with most polls showing Mitt to have a double digit lead over both Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich, with a recent PPP poll showing Mitt beating the combination of their two vote shares.

Will this be the beginning of the end?

I think it will increase the talk about it, but I kind of doubt that either Rick Santorum or Newt Gingrich will decide to withdraw anytime soon. No folks, I think this game plays out for a while longer.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Gingrich is the Republican's Best Hope

OK, so now that I have your attention, what on earth do I mean. Certainly, you say to yourself, he can't mean that Newt Gingrich has the best chance of the 4 remaining Republican candidates to beat President Obama in the general election. With that assumption, you would be...correct.

As opposed to being the Republican's best general election candidate, Newt Gingrich is the Republican's best hope that Mitt Romney manages to hang on and win the nomination. If Gingrich were to drop out, there is a good chance that Rick Santorum would win enough of the remaining primaries to make it very difficult for Mitt Romney to collect enough delegates before the Republican Convention. A mano-a-mano competition (sorry Ron Paul), would not be an easy road for Mitt Romney, even with some upcoming winner take all primaries in large states with significant urban populations.

Instead, Newt Gingrich continues to split the conservative vote with Rick Santorum, allowing Mitt Romney to continue to win primaries while not attracting more than 40% of the votes. In all polls, Mitt Romney stands the best chance against President Obama in the November general election.

So in his own twisted, self-centered way, Newt Gingrich is once again doing everything he can to bring the Republican party back to national power. Today's primaries in Mississippi and Alabama may be a very close three way battle. If Mitt Romney were to win both, even by the smallest margins, it would probably indicate to all financial backers of Santorum and Gingrich, that the party is over. Without money, they would need to fold their campaigns very shortly. If Romney had to compete against only Santorum or Gingrich, he would lose in both states, and perhaps by double digits.

Also for your reading pleasure today, this poll from Public Policy Polling for the Republican primaries in Alabama and Mississippi. Skip down to questions 22 and 23 for both states and try not to let your jaw hit your desk. Not only is Barack Obama believed to be a Muslim by 3 to 4 times as many people who believe him to be his professed faith as a Christian, but in both states, at least 60% DO NOT believe in evolution. They were not asked if they believed in evolution as opposed to Creationism, just whether or not all of the science books they read and are being read by their children in school were accurate or fabrications. Evolution and the belief that God created humans are not mutually exclusive. In fact, of those who are members of the 12 largest religious denominations in the US, approximately 80% belong to churches who SUPPORT the concept of evolution. Perhaps this is unfairly targeting these two states as a poll referenced in the Wiki article linked above shows that nationwide there is a 30% difference in support for evolution between Democrats and Republicans. However, as a guy who grew up in the north and in the first grade of a Catholic elementary school was taught evolution and religious studies in the same day, this high percentage of scientific ignorance or intolerance is pretty stunning.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Will the Republican Tuesday remain "Super"?

Ever since states started to collaborate on holding their primaries on the same day to increase their power relative to the early states (Iowa, New Hampshire, etc.), the Republican nominee has been effectively determined upon the outcome of "Super Tuesday". Will the trend continue?

In 2008, with a relative split in the delegates won on Super Tuesday, it became readily apparent that Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton were going to be battling until the last primary vote was cast. A substantial split of the delegates among Republicans on Super Tuesday 2012 would probably do the same.

However, it appears that with his narrow Michigan win last week, Mitt Romney may have enough momentum to avoid losing too many states today. Notice, this isn't a ringing endorsement of the strength of his popularity among Republican voters. When you only win by a few percentage points in your home state to a candidate who's views are anything but mainstream and who is very underfunded, that isn't a clarion call to your inevitability. But, it might be enough for Mitt. The concept of Mitt Romney losing his birth state of Michigan was so prevalent that when he held on to win, Mitt Romney seemingly beat expectations. Similarly, if Mitt Romney wins the iconic battlefield of Ohio today, almost regardless of the results in other states, it will announce the likelihood of his nomination.

A win today in Ohio and an accumulation of delegates today in the high 100s out of the 400+ available will not so much make Mitt Romney seem like the victor as much as it will make everyone come to the conclusion that neither Rick Santorum, nor Newt Gingrich, nor Ron Paul have the ability to beat Mitt Romney. Kind of backing into the nomination.

If this was the Democratic Party, I would say that the race for the presidency 2012 is over. However, the Republican Party has an uncanny ability to hold their nose and emphatically support a candidate they do not like because they realize they hate him less than his opponent, President Barack Obama.

I believe Mitt Romney will win the most states and delegates today, but both Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich will win one or more states and 10-20% of the available delegates today. Mitt Romney still will not be very far ahead of the delegate count. But it will be all but over as to who will be the Republican nominee, even if nobody drops out of the race. Once they get to winner-take-all primaries, coming in second place won't matter and Mitt will coast to the convention.
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