HolyCoast: The Democrats Nightmare Scenario
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Thursday, June 19, 2008

The Democrats Nightmare Scenario

This could be a nightmare for Obama but a very pleasant dream for McCain...and Hillary Clinton:
Until 2000, it hadn’t happened in more than 100 years, but plugged-in observers from both parties see a distinct possibility of Barack Obama winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College — and with it the presidency — to John McCain.

Here’s the scenario: Obama racks up huge margins among the increasingly affluent, highly educated and liberal coastal states, while a significant increase in turnout among black voters allows him to compete — but not to win — in the South. Meanwhile, McCain wins solidly Republican states such Texas and Georgia by significantly smaller margins than Bush’s in 2004 and ekes out narrow victories in places such as North Carolina, which Bush won by 12 points but Rasmussen presently shows as a tossup, and Indiana, which Bush won by 21 points but McCain presently leads by just 11.

One possible result: Even as the national mood moves left, the 2004 map largely holds. Obama’s 32 new electoral votes from Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado and Virginia are offset by 21 new electoral votes for McCain in Michigan and New Hampshire — and despite a 2- or 3-point popular vote victory for Obama, America wakes up on Jan. 20 to a President McCain.

According to Tad Devine, who served as the chief political consultant for Al Gore in 2000 and as a senior adviser to John F. Kerry in 2004, “it certainly is a possibility. Not a likelihood, but it is a real possibility.”

Actually, they'd wake up on January 20th to a President Bush. McCain wouldn't become president until noon (well, maybe a lot of welfare recipients would wake up to President McCain - they're not early risers).

How would Hillary benefit from this? She'd be able to say "I told you so" for the next four years since it's likely that Obama would lose states that she probably would have won. She would be positioned nicely for 2012.

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