Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Electoral College Map (10/17/12)

Last night's debate may ultimately move the polls in some way, shape or form, but we won't start seeing that today. And even if we did, this group of states in which new polling data was made available may not be the best collection to demonstrate such a shift. Of the 12 new surveys from eight states, seven of them are from states that to this point have been strongly in favor of either Obama or Romney. And while that doesn't preclude some sort of movement in those states -- as an extension of an overall national shift toward Romney, for instance -- there isn't a whole lot in the data to suggest such a shift. Not a whole lot, mind you, but some.

Let's have a look:

New State Polls (10/17/12)
State
Poll
Date
Margin of Error
Sample
Obama
Romney
Undecided
Poll Margin
FHQ Margin
Connecticut
10/4-10/14
+/- 4.2%
552 registered voters
53
38
7
+15
+11.87
Massachusetts
10/15-10/16
+/- 3.9%
709 likely voters
57
39
4
+18
+20.02
Montana
10/14
+/- 4.5%
500 likely voters
45
53
1
+8
+9.26
Montana
10/15-10/16
+/- 3.5%
806 likely voters
43
53
4
+10
--
Nevada
10/11-10/15
+/- 3.5%
806 registered voters
48
45
3
+3
+4.04
Nevada
10/15
+/- 4.5%
500 likely voters
50
47
1
+3
--
Nevada
10/15-10/16
+/- 4.4%
500 likely voters
50
43
4
+7
--
New Hampshire
10/15
+/- 4.5%
500 likely voters
50
49
1
+1
+3.77
New Jersey
10/10-10/14
+/- 3.5%
783 likely voters
48.4
41.4
--
+7
+12.21
Washington
10/14
+/- 4.5%
500 likely voters
55
42
1
+13
+13.26
Washington
10/15-10/16
+/- -.-%
574 likely voters
50
45
4
+5
--
Wisconsin
10/11-10/14
+/- 3.4%
870 likely voters
49
48
3
+1
+4.93

Polling Quick Hits:
Connecticut:
This is the first time Siena has been in the field in the Nutmeg state in 2012, and the numbers were consistent with other surveys of the state in terms of the president's numbers. However, it did understate Romney's share of support relative both to recent polling and the FHQ weighted average of the governor's share of support overall. At the end of the day, polling in the late summer hinted at a tighter than expected race in Connecticut, but the margin stretched out in the time since and hasn't contracted all that much in the time since the first presidential debate in Denver.

Massachusetts:
PPP was in the field in the Bay state just a few days ago and the climate there has not changed all that much in that period of time. There was a net two point shift in the president's direction in a state that is going to tip blue anyway.

Montana:
PPP and Rasmussen really could not have made a better case for the FHQ weighted average in the Treasure state. Montana is currently huddled close to the line between the Lean Romney and Strong Romney states and both surveys mimicked such a breakdown; one falling on each side of that (admittedly rather arbitrary) line. Like Connecticut and Massachusetts is firmly within one candidate's column. But in this case, it is in Romney's direction.

Nevada:
Changes (October 17)
StateBeforeAfter
NevadaToss Up ObamaLean Obama
Don't get too wrapped up in the change over for Nevada. After slipping into the Toss Up Obama category a couple of days ago, Nevada is back in the Lean Obama range. That is more a function of the collection of new polls there today and the fact that the Silver state was precariously positioned just -- and I mean just -- on the Toss Up side of the line between the two categories. It is worth mentioning that there were some rather large blips on the radar in Obama's direction before the first debate, but on the whole, most of the margins there fell in the 3-7 point range. Now, post-debate, that is more likely to be in the 2-4 point range with the +7 Obama from Grove Insight being more of an outlier than firmly within the range of results as it would have been before October 3.

New Hampshire:
The Granite state is now up to four post-debate surveys. That ain't a whole lot, folks. But the picture seems to be pretty clear through that scant level of data. Of the four, three have show either a tie or a one point lead (for Obama). Things are drawing closer and the weighted average in New Hampshire is approaching that of Ohio. If those two were to flip positions on the Electoral College Spectrum below, there wouldn't be that much of a change owing to the small number of electoral votes New Hampshire carries. If Romney won all the states through Iowa and then picked up a hypothetically shifted New Hampshire, that would get the governor to 267 electoral votes; not enough. If Ohio and New Hampshire switched spots, Obama would not need New Hampshire. The president would only have to win the states through Ohio, but that would be cutting it very fine indeed. That would get Obama to 271 electoral votes; just enough to retain the White House for the Democrats. New Hampshire would not be decisive given a switch with Ohio, but it wouldn't be inconsequential either.

New Jersey:
It is an apples to oranges comparison across polling firms, but to see an Obama +7 in both Nevada and New Jersey just doesn't jibe all that well with our understanding of where both of those states are in the order in 2012. Both polls are to the extreme end of the data in both states; beyond the top end of the range in Nevada and below the low end of the range of data in New Jersey. Things have closed some in the Garden state since the first debate (The Q poll yesterday had it at Obama +8.), but not to a level that is quite close enough for Romney to take advantage.

Washington:
Well, Rasmussen nailed things (...at least relative to the FHQ weighted average margin in the Evergreen state). If the +5 margin from PPP in Washington is accurate or even close to accurate, then my first reaction isn't so much Wow! as it is that we really need pollster to put down some stakes in Oregon and conduct some polls in the Beaver state. [FHQ thinks there needs to be some more polling there anyway.] As it is, this one looks now like an outlier given the other recent polling in Washington. There have only been two polls that found the race to be within 10 points and both were mid-summer. Incidentally, one of those, a July Survey USA poll, was the last time any poll found Obama under the 50% level there.

Wisconsin:
FHQ said just last week that it was taking a wait and see approach with the polling in Wisconsin. Up to last Thursday, the firms that had released post-debate polls in the Badger state were all firms that had found margins on the low to mid-level of the range of pre-debate data there. I said then that if we got data suggesting a tight race -- in the one to two point range -- from a firm that had shown a double digit Obama lead before the October 3 debate, then we would have confirmation of a significant contraction there. Well, the last Marquette Law School survey before the debate had Obama up 11 points. Post-debate that margin is down to one. That keeps Wisconsin tracking downward closer to a point of parity between the two major party candidates.


Well, Nevada jumped back into the Lean Obama category, but that seems like a temporary change in the grand scheme of things in this race. That shifts those six electoral votes back across the line into the lean area leaving 79 vulnerable electoral votes in six states to which the president is currently clinging (by FHQ's measurement). Of course, 51 of those electoral votes (Florida, Colorado and Virginia) may be a little closer to the partisan line and Romney than the FHQ metric lets on. In the zero-sum game that is the fight for most electoral votes, that increases Romney's paths to 270 by reducing the president's potential paths. That race could conceivably be one that rests on who wins the group of five states between Wisconsin and Iowa.

...or it could more simply mean that if Romney wins Ohio (along with the three light blue states mentioned above), he wins by claiming 275 electoral votes.

The Electoral College Spectrum1
VT-3
(6)2
WA-12
(158)
NH-4
(257)
MT-3
(159)
MS-6
(58)
HI-4
(10)
NJ-14
(172)
OH-183
(275/281)
GA-16
(156)
KY-8
(52)
RI-4
(14)
CT-7
(179)
IA-6
(281/263)
IN-11
(140)
AL-9
(44)
NY-29
(43)
NM-5
(184)
VA-13
(294/257)
SD-3
(129)
KS-6
(35)
MD-10
(53)
MN-10
(194)
CO-9
(303/244)
SC-9
(126)
AR-6
(29)
MA-11
(64)
OR-7
(201)
FL-29
(332/235)
NE-5
(117)
AK-3
(23)
IL-20
(84)
PA-20
(221)
NC-15
(206)
ND-3
(112)
OK-7
(20)
CA-55
(139)
MI-16
(237)
AZ-11
(191)
TX-38
(109)
ID-4
(13)
DE-3
(142)
WI-10
(247)
TN-11
(180)
WV-5
(71)
WY-3
(9)
ME-4
(146)
NV-6
(253)
MO-10
(169)
LA-8
(66)
UT-6
(6)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Romney won all the states up to and including Ohio (all Obama's toss up states plus Ohio), he would have 281 electoral votes. Romney's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Obama's number is on the left and Romney's is on the right in italics.

3 Ohio
 is the state where Obama crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election. That line is referred to as the victory line.

The Watch List only saw Nevada switch back to being on the cusp of shifting into the Toss Up Obama category (something that seems inevitable anyway), but it also added Wisconsin. The Badger state, too, is now within range of a shift into the Toss Up Obama category. And if the polling continues to show a narrow Obama lead, we will continue to see the average margin there contract. Beyond those two states, Florida, New Hampshire and Ohio are also worth looking most closely at when new data is added for each.

The Watch List1
State
Switch
Florida
from Toss Up Obama
to Toss Up Romney
Minnesota
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
Montana
from Strong Romney
to Lean Romney
Nevada
from Lean Obama
to Toss Up Obama
New Hampshire
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
Ohio
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
Oregon
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
Wisconsin
from Lean Obama
to Toss Up Obama
1 The Watch list shows those states in the FHQ Weighted Average within a fraction of a point of changing categories. The List is not a trend analysis. It indicates which states are straddling the line between categories and which states are most likely to shift given the introduction of new polling data. Montana, for example, is close to being a Lean Romney state, but the trajectory of the polling there has been moving the state away from that lean distinction.

Please see:



Are you following FHQ on TwitterGoogle+ and Facebook? Click on the links to join in.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

The Electoral College Map (10/16/12)

Debate day, part two.

Piggybacking on the comment FHQ led with yesterday, the small window of time between the vice presidential and second presidential debate perhaps triggered a bit of a slowdown over the weekend from a number of polling firms. But we did get eight polling releases out of eight states today; the same number as a day ago and not that many less than Tuesday a week ago. Regardless of the frequency, the outlook was much the same: the race has closed following the first debate. And that appears to have plateaued some, settling into a new normal heading into the next regularly scheduled potential shock to the system. What impact will that second debate have moving forward.

New State Polls (10/16/12)
State
Poll
Date
Margin of Error
Sample
Obama
Romney
Undecided
Poll Margin
FHQ Margin
Colorado
10/15
+/- 2.9%
1206 registered voters
47
48
4
+1
+1.69
Indiana
10/10-10/11
+/- 4.0%
600 likely voters
41
54
4
+13
+10.58
Iowa
10/15
+/- 2.6%
1499 likely voters
49
46
4
+3
+2.77
Massachusetts
10/10
+/- 4.5%
500 likely voters
57
42
1
+15
+20.12
New Hampshire
10/12-10/14
+/- 4.4%
500 registered voters
47
47
4
0
+3.93
New Jersey
10/10-10/14
+/- 2.7%
1319 likely voters
51
43
5
+8
+12.61
Pennsylvania
10/12-10/14
+/- 2.5%
1519 likely voters
50
46
3
+4
+6.63
Washington
10/12-10/14
+/- 4.3%
543 likely voters
54
40
3
+14
+14.01

Polling Quick Hits:
Colorado:
FHQ has made no bones about how well the weighted average is reacting to the slew of post-debate data in the Centennial state. It is lagging. Period. But I don't think it is by that much. The weighted average margin has now drawn down to about a point and a half for the president. The raw average of post-debate polling would have Romney up by a little under a point while the median of post-debate Colorado polling is Romney +1. It is reasonable at this point to say that Colorado is hovering around the partisan line now; just behind Florida where FHQ has it.

Indiana:
One thing that can be said of the Hoosier state in 2012 is that it is not a toss up as it became late in the 2008 race. And with polls showing Romney up double digits or close to it, that isn't going to change late in 2012. Both candidates have gained support since the last Rasmussen poll from late July/early August and that is simply a function of undecideds deciding. This isn't 2004 -- when Bush bested Kerry by around 20 points in Indiana -- but Indiana has shifted back toward the Republicans in 2012 (relative to 2008) a bit more than some other states.

Iowa:
Two days in a row now there have been polling releases from the Hawkeye state. Still, the two represent two-thirds of the post-debate polling in Iowa. That just isn't that much. The poll-over-poll comparisons in the pre- to post-debate polling from ARG showed a seven point shift to Romney. The comparison using Rasmussen surveys shows a five point swing to the president. We Ask America was also in the field both immediately before and now after the first debate in Denver and basically splits the difference in terms of the shifts in the other two sets of polls; a one point shift toward Romney. Obama gained a point relative to his share in the pre-debate survey and Romney added a couple of points. But there is still room for more data in Iowa.

Massachusetts:
Well, on the one hand, here is some more data on the presidential race in the Bay state. On the other, it really isn't doing a whole lot for us. Since the last Rasmussen survey both candidates have added a couple of points to their shares of support, but the Obama +15 margin remains. ...as does the dark blue shade for the state on the map below.

New Hampshire:
Changes (October 16)
StateBeforeAfter
New HampshireLean ObamaToss Up Obama
FHQ complained about Iowa being underpolled yesterday and will make the same claim here in the context of New Hampshire polling. Just three polls conducted after October 3 is just not adequate in terms of constructing a picture of the true nature of the race in the Granite state. Granted, if the national and other toss up state polling margins have dropped then the they have in New Hampshire as well. But as is our wont here at FHQ, we want to know if New Hampshire is affected about the same or is closing more or less than the other competitive states. Two of the three post-debate surveys show a tie, but that is hardly definitive evidence. That said, on the weight of the new data from those polls, the FHQ weighted average margin has contracted, bringing the Granite state back into the Toss Up Obama category. Again, as was the case when this happened with Nevada, it is important to note just how much the average has shrunk. Recall that New Hampshire slipped into the Lean Obama category just before we dropped the cutpoints between the categories. That meant that New Hampshire had even more ground to make up if the trajectory of polling ever turned around (At that point things were moving in the president's direction.) and it began to creep back toward the toss up category. It did and the average is now back within the toss up range.

New Jersey:
New Jersey is no different from the rest of the nation. If the national and state level polls are drawing closer, then it stands to reason that we would see at least some narrowing in the polling conducted post-debate in the Garden state. This Q poll seems to provide some evidence of that. It seems to be evidence of it until one considers that the previous poll of the state from the firm in between the two conventions found pretty much the same thing. In fact, Romney's share of support in the survey has trailed off by a point while Obama held steady at a 51% share. But this is an interesting comparison; the inter-convention period to the post-debate period. Some comparisons have been drawn between those two in terms of trying to quantify just how large an impact the Democratic convention in tandem with, perhaps, the fallout from Romney's 47% comments. If the first debate erased that post-convention bounce for the president, here is some proof.

Pennsylvania:
Post-debate, Quinnipiac has Pennsylvania around where both Rasmussen and Muhlenberg have the race: in the +4-5 range for Obama. There are a couple of other polls with the margin slightly higher, and together with this data -- in concert with all the 2012 polling there -- have the FHQ weighted average margin just north of that range, but narrowing somewhat. This Q poll shows an eight point shift in the margin since the September Q poll of the Keystone state. And that was an zero-sum shift between the candidates poll-over-poll; +4 Romney, -4 Obama.

Washington:
Par for the course on Washington. The latest Survey USA poll showed some movement toward Romney. Obama's share dropped a couple of points and Romney's rose by four since the September poll of the Evergreen state from the firm. That 20 point gap was a bit over where the established FHQ weighted average had been. This one isn't.


Perhaps most notably, but not all that surprisingly given changes elsewhere, New Hampshire slides back into the Toss Up Obama category after a brief post-convention stint in the Lean Obama area. That shifts those not inconsequential four electoral votes into a more vulnerable position from the Obama campaign perspective. It is not as if those have been off the Romney board, but they are becoming more attainable for the governor following the the polling changes triggered by the first debate (...though the numbers were beginning to track back just before October 3). New Hampshire is one of those states that becomes more important if Romney is unable to swing Ohio back into the red. It is an important electoral college piece in tandem with, say, Wisconsin or Iowa and/or Nevada. [This assumes Romney is able to push the partisan line up the Electoral College Spectrum to encompass Florida, Colorado and Virginia. It also assumes that if the order below is followed that Nevada, New Hampshire and Wisconsin all jump Ohio in the order.]

The New Hampshire change shuffles up the inter-category electoral vote tally on the map. The contraction of the average in the Granite state also pushes it just past Nevada next to Ohio on the Spectrum. The only other change on the Spectrum was that Indiana and Georgia flipped positions. But both are well into the Romney column and not decisive chips in the effort to cobble together 270 electoral votes.

The Electoral College Spectrum1
VT-3
(6)2
WA-12
(158)
NH-4
(257)
MT-3
(159)
MS-6
(58)
HI-4
(10)
NJ-14
(172)
OH-183
(275/281)
GA-16
(156)
KY-8
(52)
RI-4
(14)
CT-7
(179)
IA-6
(281/263)
IN-11
(140)
AL-9
(44)
NY-29
(43)
NM-5
(184)
VA-13
(294/257)
SD-3
(129)
KS-6
(35)
MD-10
(53)
MN-10
(194)
CO-9
(303/244)
SC-9
(126)
AR-6
(29)
MA-11
(64)
OR-7
(201)
FL-29
(332/235)
NE-5
(117)
AK-3
(23)
IL-20
(84)
PA-20
(221)
NC-15
(206)
ND-3
(112)
OK-7
(20)
CA-55
(139)
MI-16
(237)
AZ-11
(191)
TX-38
(109)
ID-4
(13)
DE-3
(142)
WI-10
(247)
TN-11
(180)
WV-5
(71)
WY-3
(9)
ME-4
(146)
NV-6
(253)
MO-10
(169)
LA-8
(66)
UT-6
(6)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Romney won all the states up to and including Ohio (all Obama's toss up states plus Ohio), he would have 281 electoral votes. Romney's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Obama's number is on the left and Romney's is on the right in italics.

3 Ohio
 is the state where Obama crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election. That line is referred to as the victory line.

The same two states that moved above are the same two states involved in the changing Watch List today. Indiana moves off the list and New Hampshire -- once a lean state on the cusp of moving into the toss up category -- is now in the Toss Up Obama category but within a fraction of a point of being back in the lean area. However, the trajectory of the polling in the Granite state following the first debate does not have the average tracking back in that direction.

The Watch List1
State
Switch
Florida
from Toss Up Obama
to Toss Up Romney
Minnesota
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
Montana
from Strong Romney
to Lean Romney
Nevada
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
New Hampshire
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
Ohio
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
Oregon
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
1 The Watch list shows those states in the FHQ Weighted Average within a fraction of a point of changing categories. The List is not a trend analysis. It indicates which states are straddling the line between categories and which states are most likely to shift given the introduction of new polling data. Montana, for example, is close to being a Lean Romney state, but the trajectory of the polling there has been moving the state away from that lean distinction.

Please see:



Are you following FHQ on TwitterGoogle+ and Facebook? Click on the links to join in.

2012 Debates: Second Presidential Debate

Tonight's second presidential debate kicks off at 9pm (EST) from Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY. This debate will be the sole debate to utilize a town hall format and will be hosted by CNN's Candy Crowley. It really isn't any mystery as to what to look for tonight. First of all, Crowley has bent the rules somewhat and will be asking follow up questions once the undecided voters chosen by Gallup have had their chance to pose a question. Beyond that change, all eyes are on the president following his lackluster performance in Denver almost two weeks ago and how each candidate will fare in the town hall format.

The same rules apply as last week. Feel free to weigh in with comments and other observations in comments section. I'll pop over periodically respond, but I'll be most active on Twitter (@FHQ). Feel free to follow along there using the hashtag #fhqdebate.



Are you following FHQ on TwitterGoogle+ and Facebook? Click on the links to join in.

Monday, October 15, 2012

The Electoral College Map (10/15/12)

As we enter debate season, week three, there was not much of a rush from pollsters to set baselines for comparison before Tuesday night's town hall tilt in Hempstead. In any event, there was not the same flurry of poll releases that we witnessed prior to the first debate in Denver. That is largely a function of the small window pollsters had between the vice presidential debate last Thursday and tomorrow night's  second presidential debate.

Things may have been somewhat slow on Monday, but there were still eight new polls from seven states. And as has become the trend over the last week and a half to two weeks, the data continues -- with rare exception -- to show movement toward (though not without some leveling off) Mitt Romney.

New State Polls (10/15/12)
State
Poll
Date
Margin of Error
Sample
Obama
Romney
Undecided
Poll Margin
FHQ Margin
Colorado
10/5-10/10
+/- 2.2%
2089 registered voters
48.4
46.0
5.6
+2.4
+1.79
Florida
10/13-10/14
+/- 4.0%
617 likely voters
48
49
3
+1
+0.70
Iowa
10/11-10/14
+/- 4.0%
600 likely voters
48
48
3
0
+2.75
Missouri
10/12-10/13
+/- 3.07%
1000 likely voters
41
55
4
+14
+7.17
North Carolina
10/12-10/14
+/- 3.0%
1084 registered voters
47
49
4
+2
+1.31
Pennsylvania
10/10-10/14
+/- 5.0%
438 likely voters
49
45
3
+4
+6.73
Pennsylvania
10/12-10/14
+/- 4.4%
500 likely voters
51
44
6
+7
--
Virginia
10/12-10/14
+/- 4.0%
600 likely voters
47
48
4
+1
+2.56

Polling Quick Hits:
Colorado:
In a post-debate period where the polling in Colorado has settled in around a level just under half a point for Romney (the raw average), this Gravis poll is a bright spot for the Obama campaign. Perhaps even better for the president is the fact that the poll-over-poll comparison with the last Gravis poll -- also post-debate -- shows some movement back toward Obama. A three and a half point deficit is now a two and a half point lead. As of now, those two Gravis polls basically serve as the bookends on the range of polling that has come out of the Centennial state since the debate. Of course, this is probably the lone bright spot for Obama in today's series of surveys.

Florida:
There are a couple of notes on Florida. First, Today's Gravis poll is an exact mirror image of the PPP survey released a day ago. Second, Mitt Romney has led every (completely) post-debate poll in the Sunshine state with the exception of one; an Obama +1 in the most recent Marist/Wall Street Journal/NBC poll. The raw, post-debate average has Romney up by nearly two points, and though the FHQ weighted average is lagging, it is gradually tracking down toward either a tie or the Romney side of the partisan line on the Electoral College Spectrum below.

Iowa:
If the Hawkeye state was underpolled before the first debate in Denver, it is really underpolled now after the debate has in part led to an overall narrowing between the candidates in the latest survey data. If the margin overall is tighter, then Iowa is not only inching closer to the partisan line between the two candidates' groups of states, but is also becoming more consequential in the race to 270 if all or some of the states below it on the Spectrum slip across the line into Romney's column, thus increasing the governor's paths to the winning threshold. The scant evidence that we do have following the first debate suggests that Obama is ahead by the smallest of margins there.

Missouri:
Recent polling in the Show Me state has indicated a closer but not necessarily competitive race there.  And while the Wenzel Strategies poll shows a wider margin between Governor Romney and President Obama, it is a gap that has closed slightly -- a nearly 20 point Romney lead has dropped to 14 points -- since the firm's September survey. Again, Missouri is not competitive. Rather, it is firmly lodged in the Lean Romney category, having swung back toward the Republicans by about seven points since 2008.

North Carolina:
The Old North state remains close if not competitive at the presidential level, but Mitt Romney has maintained an edge in every post-debate poll in the field completely after the debate there. In those four polls, the raw average margin by which Romney leads is just more than four points. That would put North Carolina into the Lean Romney category; close, but not close enough for the president unless there is not only a leveling off of the current trajectory of polling, but a reversal. Even that likely won't be enough.

Pennsylvania:
Pennsylvania has closed as well. But the narrowing in the polls in the Keystone state has reduced the average there far less than in some other, slightly more competitive states. Given the raw, post-debate average, Pennsylvania is roughly analogous to North Carolina; potentially reachable for, in this case, Romney, but likely just out of reach to the governor. Both Pennsylvania and Michigan are in the same boat and are an awful lot like New Jersey in 2004 to the Bush campaign. Close enough to warrant some thought about resource expenditure, but most likely just a tease in terms of the probability of actually winning either on election day.

Virginia:
Like Florida above, Mitt Romney has led in all but two post-debate Virginia surveys. Also like Florida, the FHQ weighted average margin continues to track down closer to parity between Obama and Romney. The post-debate average gives just a 0.3 point lead over the president to Governor Romney.


Nothing much changed across either the map above or Electoral College Spectrum below. However, if there are three states that make FHQ uncomfortable about where our averages currently have the race, it is the Virginia/Colorado/Florida group. As mentioned just a few days ago, if the weighted average formula is not as reactive as we would like, it is affecting things at the margins in those three states especially. The data suggests the average is heading into Romney territory in each, but the evidence is not strong enough to get it there just yet. Our 2008 adjustment to increase the weight of the most recent poll really has minimal effects. But again, the value of the slow change is that when a change occurs, it is typically a lasting change. And with only three weeks until election day, that is very likely to be the case.

The one minor change on the Spectrum is a Missouri/Tennessee switch among the Lean Romney states.

The Electoral College Spectrum1
VT-3
(6)2
WA-12
(158)
NV-6
(257)
MT-3
(159)
MS-6
(58)
HI-4
(10)
NJ-14
(172)
OH-183
(275/281)
IN-11
(156)
KY-8
(52)
RI-4
(14)
CT-7
(179)
IA-6
(281/263)
GA-16
(145)
AL-9
(44)
NY-29
(43)
NM-5
(184)
VA-13
(294/257)
SD-3
(129)
KS-6
(35)
MD-10
(53)
MN-10
(194)
CO-9
(303/244)
SC-9
(126)
AR-6
(29)
MA-11
(64)
OR-7
(201)
FL-29
(332/235)
NE-5
(117)
AK-3
(23)
IL-20
(84)
PA-20
(221)
NC-15
(206)
ND-3
(112)
OK-7
(20)
CA-55
(139)
MI-16
(237)
AZ-11
(191)
TX-38
(109)
ID-4
(13)
DE-3
(142)
WI-10
(247)
TN-11
(180)
WV-5
(71)
WY-3
(9)
ME-4
(146)
NH-4
(251)
MO-10
(169)
LA-8
(66)
UT-6
(6)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Romney won all the states up to and including Ohio (all Obama's toss up states plus Ohio), he would have 281 electoral votes. Romney's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Obama's number is on the left and Romney's is on the right in italics.

3 Ohio
 is the state where Obama crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election. That line is referred to as the victory line.

Likewise the Watch List remains unchanged. Florida is on the list, but Colorado and Virginia remain off of it despite a closing margin in the averages overall. The final three entries on the list in addition to those three above are probably the states from which to most watch new polling.

The Watch List1
State
Switch
Florida
from Toss Up Obama
to Toss Up Romney
Indiana
from Strong Romney
to Lean Romney
Minnesota
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
Montana
from Strong Romney
to Lean Romney
Nevada
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
New Hampshire
from Lean Obama
to Toss Up Obama
Ohio
from Toss Up Obama
to Lean Obama
Oregon
from Lean Obama
to Strong Obama
1 The Watch list shows those states in the FHQ Weighted Average within a fraction of a point of changing categories. The List is not a trend analysis. It indicates which states are straddling the line between categories and which states are most likely to shift given the introduction of new polling data. Montana, for example, is close to being a Lean Romney state, but the trajectory of the polling there has been moving the state away from that lean distinction.

Please see:



Are you following FHQ on TwitterGoogle+ and Facebook? Click on the links to join in.