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Recent Posts
- Election Night Preview — Part Five — The Local News and the West Coast (11:00 To 11:59 P.M. Eastern)
- Election Night Preview — Part Four — Prime Time Hour Three (10:00 to 10:59 P.M. Eastern)
- Election Night Preview — Part Three — Prime Time Hour Two (9:00 To 9:59 P.M. Eastern)
- Election Night Preview — Part Two — Prime Time Hour One (8:00 to 8:59 p.m. Eastern)
- Exit Polls and Projections
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Tag Archives: Rashida Tlaib
2024 Presidential Primaries — South Carolina Republicans and Michigan
As we head into the last week of February, we are also reaching the end of the authorized early primaries. Under the respective rules of the two parties, there is a preliminary window in which only some states were authorized to hold early primaries/caucuses. For the Republicans, the “regular” primary window opens on March 1. For Democrats, the “regular” primary window opens on the first Tuesday in March (March 5).
For this last week, we have three primaries on the book. First up, today, is the South Carolina Republican primary. South Carolina law allows the parties to choose the date of their own primary, and the two parties have tended to choose different dates (but usually a Saturday). And so we had the Democratic primary several weeks back which was won by President Joe Biden. Now, it’s the Republican primary. While there are seven candidates on the ballot, two of them are not known nationally, and three of the nationally-known candidates have dropped out. In other words, while five of the candidates may get some votes, there are only two with any chance of winning delegates — former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and a candidate who ineligible to be president, Donald Trump. South Carolina Republicans use a “winner-take-most” system for allocating delegates. In other words, each congressional district has three delegates and whomever wins that district gets all three delegates. Likewise, there are twenty-nine at-large delegates, and whomever wins the state gets all twenty-nine delegates. Especially with only two serious candidates in the races, whomever wins statewide will have won at least one congressional district (and probably will have won more than one). Thus, the winner of the primary is guaranteed to take at least 32 of the 50 delegates (which is why this type of system is referred to as winner-take-most). Despite the fact that Nikki Haley used to be the governor of South Carolina, the traditional Republican Party in South Carolina is dead and has been replaced by the Trump Party. While anybody who did not vote in the Democratic Primary could theoretically vote in the Republican Primary, there probably will not be enough independents and Democrats voting to save the Republican Party from itself. Polls show Donald Trump leading by a wide enough margin that he should win all fifty delegates, and the only question is whether Nikki Haley can make it close enough to steal a district or two.
On Tuesday, we will primaries for both parties in Michigan. President Joe Biden should win the state easily. Neither Representative Dean Phillips nor Marianne Williamson is a serious contender to reach the fifteen percent to win delegates. The real contender to take delegates away from President Biden is “uncommitted.” Representative Rashida Tlaib has been encouraging voters to vote for uncommitted in protest of President Biden’s middle of the road stance on Israel’s response to Hamas’s invasion of Israel. While the pro-Palestinian progressive wing of the Democratic Party has a problem with Israel trying to remove Hamas from the Gaza Strip, if President Biden were to do what they want him to do, it would guarantee Donald Trump’s victory in November. If uncommitted stays below 15% (state-wide or in any individual district), President Biden will win all of the delegates (state-wide or in that district). The largest districts have seven delegates; so it is unlikely that uncommitted will get more than one delegate in any individual district. The one exception to that might be Representative Tlaib’s district. And the issue in that district will be whether uncommitted can get to the 21% necessary to win a second delegate. If uncommitted does not win any delegates in that district, we could see a primary challenge to Representative Tlaib emerge. State-wide, there are twenty-five at-large delegates and fifteen party-leader delegates. As such, if uncommitted were to get to fifteen percent state-wide, uncommitted would get, at least, four at-large and two party-leader delegates. But the expectation is that President Biden will win almost all of the 117 delegates at stake on Tuesday.
Posted in Donald Trump, Elections, Primary Elections
Also tagged Dean Phillips, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Marianne Williamson, Michigan, Nikki Haley, South Carolina
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August 4 Primaries — Arizona, Michigan, and Washington
As the calendar flips around to August, we are about to hit a rush of state and congressional primaries. Some states (e.g., California, Texas, Pennsylvania, Illinois) hold their state and congressional primaries on the same day as the presidential primary. Others (e.g., Florida) hold a separate presidential primary with the state and congressional primaries occurring later in the year. And most of the states with separate primaries will hold them between August 1 and mid-September. (In addition, there is the postponed Connecticut primary.)
Earlier this week, I discussed the two states holding primaries on August 4 that I am most familiar with (Kansas and Missouri). (And if I hear another ad attacking a hardcore pro-life Republican for saying something even slightly pro-choice fifteen years ago, I may get physically ill.) The other three states holding primaries on August 4 are Arizona, Michigan, and Washington.
In Arizona, the biggest race is the special election for the remaining two years of the Senator John McCain’s term. Mark Kelly is the only candidate on the ballot on the Democratic side. It is likely that interim Senator Martha McSally will be the Republican nominee. She does, however, have primary opposition. Her opponent has some money, but not really enough to run a successful campaign. So unless there is a lot of silent opposition to her among Arizona Republicans, she should win the primary. (There was one poll that compared Kelly against both McSally and her primary opponent, and the primary opponent did a little bit better but not much better against Kelly.) In 2018, the Democrats won 5 of the 9 congressional seats and none of the races was particularly close. At this point, I am not hearing anything out of Arizona that points to any of the primaries being interesting.
Posted in House of Representatives, Primary Elections, Senate
Also tagged Arizona, Brenda Jones, Mark Kelly, Martha McSally, Michigan, primary elections, Washington
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