The latest national opinion polls show Mitt
Romney running neck and neck with President Obama in the election to take place
next November. On the face of it, that
should put him in with a very good chance.
But the election is not won in a single,
one person one vote, national election, but on a state by state basis, by accumulating
electors in the Electoral College. Not
all States allocate Electoral College votes in the same way. Some do it on a
“winner takes all” basis, and some do it proportionately to the number of votes
the contenders got in the state.
The
Real Clear Politics website attempts to predict how the Electoral College votes
will break down.
Their analysis can be found at
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/2012_elections_electoral_college_map.html -
According to their analysis, Barrack Obama
starts with 227 Electoral College votes in states that are
most likely to give him a majority, and he needs to get to 270 to win.
Mitt
Romney starts with only 170 Electoral College votes in states most likely to
give him the majority. So he has to win more of the states that could go either
way, which are
- Arizona (11 electoral college votes),
- Colorado (9 votes),
- Florida (29),
- Iowa (6),
- Michigan (16),
- Missouri (10),
- New Hampshire (4),
- North Carolina (15),
- Ohio (18),
- Virginia (13), and
- Wisconsin (10).
These are the eleven states where the big
money will be spent, and where television viewers will be bombarded with advertisements
for and against the two candidates.
Of these eleven swing states, John McCain
only won only two in 2008, namely Arizona and Missouri. So he lost the election.
In contrast, George Bush won those two, but
also won Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Virginia and North Carolina, and that was
enough to give him victory in the Electoral College over John Kerry.
The really big prize on this list is
Florida, with 29 votes. Mitt Romney will
be tempted strongly to pick someone from
Florida as his running mate. Senator Marco Rubio, a man of Cuban American
heritage, is a strong contender. As an
Hispanic, he may also have a wider appeal, but the anti immigrant rhetoric of
many Republican spokespeople will mitigate this.
Ohio
has 18 votes, and Senator Rob Portman, if chosen as vice Presidential nominee,
would probably bring Ohio in behind Romney, and he has more governmental
experience than Senator Rubio .
Mitt Romney himself is a native of
Michigan, which should help him there.
Virginia has traditionally been a safe
Republican state, in common with almost all states of the Old Confederacy. But, like North Carolina, it has been
recently trending Democratic.
As in all elections, turnout will be vital.
The huge turnout of African Americans, and young people, for Obama in 2008 will
be hard to repeat. On the other hand,
Mitt Romney lacks some of the deep patriotic, and non partisan appeal of John
Mc Cain.
The economy will be the crucial campaign
issue. The US economy seems to be improving, but that recovery may not be
evenly spread. Mitt Romney will probably focus most effort in the swing states where the economy is doing less well.
At the end of the day, it will all come
down to where those 11 states, and how their 141 Electoral College votes, go.
Other things being equal, if Mitt Romney can
win Florida, Ohio, Colorado, Arizona, Missouri, North Carolina and Michigan, he will
be President. Winning both Florida and Ohio at the same time will be his
biggest task. Michigan will also be very
difficult.
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