Category Archives: Uncategorized

Last Second Decisions

One of the thing that makes it difficult to forecast primaries (as opposed to general elections) is that people tend to make last second decisions.  This problem is not because primary voters are more indecisive than general election voters, but mostly because they have more choices.  In the general, 96% of the voters know well in advance whether they will be voting Republican or Democrat.  In a primary, voters have to choose which Republican or which Democrat will best represent them and their party in the general election.  That choice involves every voter deciding what is more important — pragmatism or ideology.

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Who Would YOU Choose?

If you could/will attend, for whom would you caucus? Also select who you think will win, whether or not you’d caucus for that candidate. Enjoy!

                                                                                                                                 

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Iowa Caucuses: A Personal Tale

IA Caucus 2016We all talk about the caucuses – who will attend, which party the caucus-goers will choose, who will win what percentage of the vote. But you don’t often hear about what it’s really like to attend one.

I attended a caucus in Iowa in the 1980’s. Being from New York and having worked campaigns, petition drives, and for the party, I had this arrogant view that the caucuses would be “quaint”. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Pre-caucus thought: gentle people having somewhat informed conversations over tea and cookies. Continue Reading...

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Happy 10th Anniversary*

Democratic Convention Watch has now been publishing for over 10 years. Our first post, which can be found here, was on November 7th, 2005. (* So yes, this post is a little late).

My thanks to Oreo, Docjess, Tmess2, and to all our readers and posters throughout the last 10 years

And with the RNC openly discussing a brokered convention, stay with DCW for all the delegate, convention and political news throughout 2016.

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Polling round-up aggregate links for 01-15.11.2015

Those links are up and running at my politics blog and are sure to fill-up quite fast:

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GOP and print press spar over 2016 convention access charges

The airlines have been charging fees for everything on an airplane. The GOP decided to join in the fun:

For the first time, Republican presidential nominating convention organizers are poised to charge print journalists for a seat in the convention hall.

GOP convention organizers are proposing charging news organizations $150 per seat in the writing press stand, which would include a chair, a table and access to electricity. The move has the press’ representatives up in arms, arguing it makes convention coverage a “pay-to-play” scenario. Continue Reading...

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Polling round-up, 16-30.09.2015

The polling for the second half of September, 2015 is already well underway and some data has already come in. Below, after the break, are the links. As usual, those blog threads of mine are going to fill up pretty quickly. There have already been three important senatorial polls worth a look and one set of presidential matchups that show a shift back toward Clinton (D).

D-nomination (national and state), 16-30.09.2015

R-nomination (national and state), 16-30.09.2015 Continue Reading...

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Poll: Who won last night’s GOP Debate

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A Look Abroad — Upcoming Elections

From time to time, I like to take a look at upcoming elections in our allies.  As the recent market fluctuations in response to problem with the Chinese economy show, the U.S. is not immune to feeling the effects of problems in the rest of the word.  Between now and November, there will be elections in Greece, Canada, Portugal, and Turkey.  For now, I want to focus on Greece, Canada, and Turkey.

Greece will hold its second election of 2015 next Sunday, September 20.  This election was almost inevitable after the results of the January election.  The Greek economy has been on shaky ground since the 2008 global recession, and Greece has needed multiple bailouts from its economic partners to avoid defaulting on its loans.  In January 2015, the Greeks voted for a new party (Syrizia) that opposed the concessions made in past bailout deals and promised to be a tough negotiator in the next round.  The problem was that Greece needed a new bailout more than its partners needed to keep Greece afloat.  So the government eventually had to accept a worse deal than its supporters wanted.  Several members of the governing party voted against the deal, costing the government its majority and leading to this second election.

Greece uses a proportional representation system to elect 250 members of parliament.  To reduce the likelihood (endemic to proportional representative systems) of an inconclusive result in which tiny parties hold the balance of power, Greece gives the party that finishes first an additional 50 seats.  As a result, it only takes around 35-40% of the vote  rather than 48-50% to get a majority of the seats.  The question for next week’s election is whether Syrizia will keep their supporters (with voters recognizing the limitations that the Greek government faces) or whether Greek voters will look for some other party promising the impossible. Continue Reading...

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Polling round-up, 22-31.08.2015

I am doing things a little differently,  in order to keep my ‘statistical house’ nice and clean.

In five categories, I have collected all polling from August 22 to August 31, 2015. Those links are at my politics blog:

Democratic Nomination, GOP nomination, Presidential D-R matchups, Senatorial/Gubernatorial races and things like fav/unfav, approve/disapprove + specific issues.  Sometimes, I go deep into the poll internals for stuff, especially when something doesn’t quite seem to jive.  I will be keeping this system as long as there is primary polling going on, publishing round-ups twice a month. If you simply go to my politics blog,  you will see that two of five threads for September 1 through September 15 are also already up and running. I fill them up as the data comes in and I have time to really sit down and look at the numbers.  In the future, this is a really handy way to look back and see how things really were. Continue Reading...

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