It’s all over but for the voting at
this point. And the voting itself is already
well underway. It is estimated that
34-36% of voters will cast their ballots before Election Day, up from 32% in
2012.
Yes, as Steve pointed out in his
post "Trump's Train Finally Arrives at 'Too Far' ",
Donald Trump has finally gone “too far” in his bizarre campaign, with video taped comments so repugnant that the “belief system” the GOP has carefully constructed
around Trump has finally crumbled. The
central lie put forward by Mike Pence, Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, Reince
Priebus and every other GOP leader that endorsed him – that Trump was “normal”
if “unconventional” – has been exposed.
And the rats who are still on the Trump ship are writhing in public
agony over their next step.
According to a CNN scientific poll,
Hillary Clinton won Debate #2 last night, by a 57/34 margin, an incredibly dark
and ugly affair featuring no opening handshake and 90 minutes of almost
non-stop Trump vitriol, lies, pacing and stalking while Clinton held her
ground, parried attacks and tried to inject some positivity into the proceedings. Another scientific poll, by YouGov, also had
it as a Clinton win but by a smaller margin, 47/42.
As for the state of the race, the
latest numbers – which do not reflect, as yet, the effects of either The Tape
or the debate – show a race tilting sharply towards Clinton. Her comeback from her low point in
mid-September, when she sank below 300 projected Electoral College delegates
and a less-than-2-point lead in the national polls, has come in three
stages. First, the noise died down from
the issues that plagued her in early September (the hiding of her pneumonia,
her “basket of deplorable” gaffe). Second
was the Clinton rout of Trump in the September 26 debate, and the ensuing
Trump-extended Miss Universe debacle.
Those events have propelled Clinton’s margin from 1.8 points to its
current 5.6 point level. And finally, the
impact from The Tape (and perhaps Debate #2), which has yet to be reflected in
the polls, but it is not hard to predict that the margin will further expand.
PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT: NATIONAL POLLS
|
|||||||
Week Ending
|
Aug 27
|
Sep 3
|
Sep 10
|
Sep 17
|
Sep 24
|
Oct 1
|
Oct 8
|
Clinton
|
46.5
|
45.8
|
46.2
|
45.0
|
46.5
|
47.0
|
48.3
|
Trump
|
40.2
|
41.8
|
42.8
|
43.2
|
43.3
|
42.5
|
42.7
|
Other/NA
|
13.3
|
12.3
|
11.0
|
11.8
|
10.2
|
10.5
|
9.0
|
Margin
|
6.3
|
4.0
|
3.4
|
1.8
|
3.2
|
4.5
|
5.6
|
Our BTRTN Electoral College Snapshot #6
has Clinton up 351-187, with recent polling flipping both Ohio and Arizona from
Trump to Clinton, which accounts for the change from
the 322-216 count in our last Snapshot #5 last week. In addition, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin have
swung from Lean D to Solid D, and Alaska and Indiana came back from Solid R to
Lean R. Only Nevada moved in the wrong
direction for Clinton, from Lean D to Toss-up D. And again, this Snapshot is based on pre-Tape/pre-debate
polls.
Importantly, Clinton has broken
through the 50%+ barrier on several polls, and her 48.3% average over the past
week is at a high. She now has 263 Solids,
only 7 short of the magic 270.
And Colorado is just short of Solid, and their nine delegates would put
her over the top. Not to mention the 79
toss-ups that favor her marginally now, which could be reasonably expected to move
more to Clinton in polling this coming week.
Trump’s support is rapidly dwindling,
now down to only the reddest of the red states, and it is even unclear how
solid those states really are, since there has been virtually no polling in
them. Trump has a single-digit margin in
plenty of states that are typically solid red; Alaska, Texas, Georgia and South
Carolina are showing 15-20 point polling swings versus Romney’s 2012 winning
margin.
PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT: ELECTORAL COLLEGE
|
||
Electoral College
|
Oct 2
|
Oct 9
|
CLINTON - TOTAL
|
322
|
351
|
Clinton - Solid
|
233
|
263
|
Clinton - Lean
|
35
|
9
|
Clinton - Tossup
|
54
|
79
|
Trump - Tossup
|
29
|
0
|
Trump - Lean
|
32
|
46
|
Trump - Solid
|
155
|
141
|
TRUMP - TOTAL
|
216
|
187
|
Swing States (EC)
|
Latest Polls
as of Oct 9
|
BTRTN Rating
|
Colorado (9)
|
Clinton +6
|
Lean D
|
Florida (29)
|
Clinton +3
|
Toss-up D
|
Nevada (6)
|
Clinton +2
|
Toss-up D
|
N. Carolina (15)
|
Clinton +2
|
Toss-up D
|
Arizona (11)
|
Clinton +2
|
Toss-up D
|
Ohio (18)
|
Clinton +1
|
Toss-up D
|
Alaska (3)
|
Trump +3
|
Lean R
|
S. Carolina (9)
|
Trump +4
|
Lean R
|
Iowa (6)
|
Trump +4
|
Lean R
|
Georgia (16)
|
Trump +5
|
Lean R
|
Indiana (11)
|
Trump +5
|
Lean R
|
You can easily envision the five
Toss-up D’s that are in Clinton’s column moving steadily into “Lean D” or even
“Solid D” over the next week. And
perhaps there will be more flipping from Trump’s Lean R’s. Trump is falling in an abyss that does not
appear to have a bottom. Trump’s
interviews with Howard Stern over a 17-year period have already emerged – they
are awful – and the producer of “The Apprentice” has vowed to release some outtakes
that he says are even worse than The Tape.
The GOP endorsement defections are
piling up, and look for any number of GOP Senators up for re-election bailing out
soon. Mark Kirk of Illinois was an early
defector. Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire
called Trump a “role model for our children” last week, and had to walk that
back even before The Tape. She has now “unendorsed”
him, as has John McCain of Arizona and GOP Senate candidate Joe Heck of Nevada.
Other Senators in tight races to
keep an eye on include Toomey of Pennsylvania, Blunt of Missouri, Burr of North
Carolina, Johnson of Wisconsin, Rubio of Florida and GOP candidate Young of
Indiana. Already the list of “un-endorsers”
among GOP Senators is long – in addition to McCain, Kirk and Ayotte, it
includes, just in the last 48 hours, Thune (South Dakota), Sasse (Nebraska), Crapo (Idaho), Lee (Utah), Murkowski (Alaska) and
Capito (West Virginia). That is quite a red state line-up of defectors.
As for Mike Pence…there has been
widespread speculation that Pence might step down, given that Pence declined to
play his usual explainer/enabler role as Chief Trump Sap Surrogate
after The Tape came out. Such talk was then re-fueled by Trump’s public break with
Pence over Syria in the debate last night.
But I doubt Pence will drop out.
One post-Tape poll showed that only 12% of Republicans want Trump to
resign the ticket. Pence knows that
loyalty is highly valued by GOP voters, and I’m sure he went to school on the reaction
to Ted Cruz’s non-endorsement at the GOP debate, which was widely vilified. So look for Pence to hang-in, though perhaps with a bit more distance from The Donald than before.
‘***************************
Here is the full 50-state
Snapshot. Note that Maine is split
(hence the asterisk), with 3 electoral votes for Clinton and one for Trump.
ELECTORAL COLLEGE SNAPSHOT
|
|||||
2016 Electoral Votes
|
2012 Margin (D-R)
|
Latest 2016 Polls as
of 10/9/16
|
BTRTN Prior Rating as of 10/2/16
|
BTRTN Current Rating as of 10/9/16
|
|
DC
|
3
|
84
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Hawaii
|
4
|
43
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Maryland
|
10
|
25
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Massachusetts
|
11
|
23
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Vermont
|
3
|
36
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
California
|
55
|
21
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
New York
|
29
|
27
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Washington
|
12
|
14
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Illinois
|
20
|
16
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
New Jersey
|
14
|
17
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Delaware
|
3
|
19
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
New Mexico
|
5
|
10
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Oregon
|
7
|
12
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Connecticut
|
7
|
18
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Rhode Island
|
4
|
27
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Maine
|
4
|
15
|
Solid*
|
Solid*
|
|
Minnesota
|
10
|
8
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Virginia
|
13
|
3
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Michigan
|
16
|
10
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
New Hampshire
|
4
|
6
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
20
|
5
|
Lean
|
SOLID
|
|
Wisconsin
|
10
|
7
|
Toss-up
|
SOLID
|
|
Colorado
|
9
|
5
|
Clinton +6
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Florida
|
29
|
1
|
Clinton +4
|
Toss-up
|
Toss-up
|
Nevada
|
6
|
7
|
Clinton +2
|
Lean
|
TOSS-UP
|
N. Carolina
|
15
|
-2
|
Clinton +2
|
Toss-up
|
Toss-up
|
Arizona
|
11
|
-11
|
Clinton +2
|
Toss-up
|
TOSS-UP
|
Ohio
|
18
|
2
|
Clinton +0
|
Toss-up
|
TOSS-UP
|
Alaska
|
3
|
-13
|
Trump +3
|
Solid
|
Lean
|
S. Carolina
|
9
|
-11
|
Trump +4
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Iowa
|
6
|
6
|
Trump +4
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Georgia
|
16
|
-8
|
Trump +5
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Indiana
|
11
|
-11
|
Trump +5
|
Solid
|
Lean
|
Missouri
|
10
|
-10
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Mississippi
|
6
|
-12
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Montana
|
3
|
-14
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Texas
|
38
|
-16
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Utah
|
6
|
-48
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Louisiana
|
8
|
-17
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
S. Dakota
|
3
|
-18
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
N. Dakota
|
3
|
-20
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Tennessee
|
11
|
-21
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Kansas
|
6
|
-22
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Alabama
|
9
|
-22
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Nebraska
|
5
|
-23
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Kentucky
|
8
|
-23
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Arkansas
|
6
|
-24
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
W. Virginia
|
5
|
-27
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Idaho
|
4
|
-32
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Oklahoma
|
7
|
-34
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
|
Wyoming
|
3
|
-41
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
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