All around the country voters are going to the polls and wrapping packages just for me, and sometime beginning about 4pm PDT this afternoon we’ll start unwrapping them. Am I excited?
Continue reading …Obama just sent this out via email to supporters: “Figure out when you will vote and how you will get there.” I’m surprised he didn’t include something about eating your vegetables and don’t text and drive.
Continue reading …For those of you who may still be Eeyores expecting everything to go wrong tomorrow, Nate Silver has the post for you.
Continue reading …HolyCoast will be on wall-to-wall election coverage tomorrow with a special post that will go up about 3pm PDT, when the first polls start closing in Indiana and Kentucky.
Continue reading …I like Michael Steele personally and supported his run for Chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Continue reading …Nate Silver does some conjecturing at the Five Thirty Eight blog: Dawn breaks over New York City on Wednesday, Nov. 3. Democrats catching the early train to work are thinking about adding a little whiskey to their morning coffee. Because the headlines they are reading are truly terrible. Not only did Republicans take over the House, but they also did so going away — winning a net of 78 seats from Democrats. Seven seats in New York State changed hands; so did six in Pennsylvania, five in Ohio and four in North Carolina. Party luminaries like Jim Obertsar and Raul Grijalva were defeated. Barney Frank and Dennis Kucinich survived, but they did so by just 2 points apiece, and their elections weren’t called until 1 a.m. Democrats picked up just one Republican-held seat — the open seat in Delaware — but Joseph Cao somehow survived in his very Democratic-leaning district in New Orleans. Virtually every race deemed to be a tossup broke to the Republican. The news isn’t much better in the Senate. The Democratic candidates in North Dakota, Arkansas, Indiana, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Illinois all lost, flipping those seats to red from blue. So did Harry Reid in Nevada and Joe Manchin in West Virginia; both of them lost by 7 points, in fact. Washington State isn’t finished counting its ballots, but Dino Rossi has about a 30,000-vote lead over Patty Murray, and looks likely to prevail. California isn’t done counting either, and the race between Barbara Boxer and Carly Firoina remains too close to call. It might not matter anyway: Joseph I. Lieberman has scheduled a press conference for later that afternoon, and is expected to announce that — after seeing the strength of the mandate the voters have given the G.O.P. — he’ll begin conferencing with Republicans when Congress reconvenes in January. Races for governor provide little respite. Jerry Brown beat Meg Whitman in California — one of the few positives that Democrats can take out of the night. But Democrats lost the close races in Ohio, Florida, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon and Connecticut, and were blown out in Pennsylvania and Michigan. Rick Perry, while expected to win in Texas, did so by a surprisingly large margin — nearly 20 points — and is making the rounds on the morning shows; the whispers are that he could be a Presidential contender. Pundits are running out of metaphors to describe what just happened. Not a wave, a hurricane. Not a hurricane, a tsunami! Not a tsunami; a tsunami from a magnitude 9.5 earthquake. Or by a meteor strike! Democrats knew it was going to be bad. But they didn’t think it was going to be this bad. So, what happened? Silver goes on in the piece to explain why the scenario above might not be all that far-fetched. You can read it here .
Continue reading …The 2010 Midterm Elections are now only hours away. With Republicans poised to retake the House of Representatives, Democrats are now trying to hold control of the Senate. The AP’s Kelly Daschle reports. (Nov. 1)
Continue reading …There’s one big mother wave heading for the polling booths of this country: The final USA Today/Gallup measure of Americans’ voting intentions for Congress shows Republicans continuing to hold a substantial lead over Democrats among likely voters, a lead large enough to suggest that regardless of turnout, the Republicans will win more than the 40 seats needed to give them the majority in the U.S. House. The results are from Gallup’s Oct. 28-31 survey of 1,539 likely voters. It finds 52% to 55% of likely voters preferring the Republican candidate and 40% to 42% for the Democratic candidate on the national generic ballot — depending on turnout assumptions. Gallup’s analysis of several indicators of voter turnout from the weekend poll suggests turnout will be slightly higher than in recent years, at 45%. This would give the Republicans a 55% to 40% lead on the generic ballot, with 5% undecided. Unprecedented is way too timid a description of those numbers. It’s a Democrat Mass Extinction Event. The equivalent of the asteroid that took out the dinosaurs. It’s an electeroid! I’ve been calling for a 56 seat gain in the House. I think I may be way too low.
Continue reading …Real politically savvy bunch they had there in Washington yesterday (from The Daily Caller ): Most attendees The Daily Caller interviewed at Comedy Central political pundits Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert’s rally to “Restore Sanity and/or Fear” didn’t know for whom they are voting on November 2. They did, however, know they’re voting Democrat, down the line, because, they said, Republicans don’t fit their mold of “moving forward” in the country. For instance, Liz Pifer, a student at Robert Morris University in Pittsburgh, Pa., told TheDC that though she plans to vote in the midterm elections on Tuesday, she didn’t know who was running for Pennsylvania’s open Senate seat. She later said that she thought Joe Sestak was running, and that she’ll probably vote for him because he’s a Democrat. As for House candidates, she said, “I don’t know who’s running.” Tara Formica, a junior in college in New Jersey, told TheDC she’s not sure if she’ll vote on Tuesday, and that “it kind of just depends.” She said she came to the rally Saturday “just to come,” and that she didn’t know who was running in her district. Jared Young, a California resident who attended the rally with fellow William and Mary student Chris McIntosh, told TheDC he already voted via absentee ballot in California’s heated Senate and Governor races – but not for Meg Whitman, Carly Fiorina, Barbara Boxer or Jerry Brown. He said he wrote himself in on the ballot for the Senator seat and voted for the Green Party candidate in the governor race – even though he had no idea who the candidate was. “I’m not kidding,” Young said. “I really did that.” McIntosh, who is registered in Virginia, said he plans vote Tuesday for Democratic candidates down the line, even though he doesn’t know who they are. Melissa Miller, who came to rally from Texas with her husband Tom, said, told TheDC she’s voting for the Democrat House candidate, but couldn’t name the candidate from her district. “I was mostly paying attention to the governor’s race,” Miller said. And then there’s this: Anti-Tea-Party-ness and anger toward Fox News dominated most signs at the rally on the National Mall, a clear fit for comedian Stewart’s jabs at what he calls extremism. Shoshana Senn, 15, of Arlington, Va., thinks Tea Partiers are “dumb.” I’ll bet most Tea Partiers could have named who they were voting for.
Continue reading …Could it be a Verizon iPhone? The white iPhone 4? Perhaps a surprise Core i3 ULV in the 13-inch MacBook Pro? We can’t tell for sure, but our money’s on none of the above, folks. We’ll be sure to dig through for changes as soon as the house that Jobs built is up and running once more. [Thanks to everyone who sent this in] The Apple Store is down, nobody here but us chickens originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 31 Oct 2010 01:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …