At long last Election Day has
arrived. In just five hours, voters in Dixville
Notch, New Hampshire will cast the first ballots in the election. And when most of the ballots are counted nationwide, this “long national nightmare” of a race, unprecedented in venom, punctuated
with sordid disclosures, October surprises galore, and a November one to
boot, will finally end. The revelation from FBI Director
James Comey that he had found, in a “new“ trove of emails, absolutely nothing
at all (simply a combination of duplicated or irrelevant emails) came too late
to flip the election back to the large margins Clinton enjoyed before their
discovery. But it may have helped solidify the outcome and perhaps affect a swing
state or two.
Before we render our final
predictions at BTRTN, a few notes:
· These are our final predictions, but
we reserve the right to read a final straggler poll or two tomorrow morning and
amend as necessary. Failure to do so in
2012 cost us Florida, the only state we missed in an otherwise unblemished
presidential prediction.
· If any reader wants our handy, dandy semi-famous
spreadsheets that allow you to easily track Election Night outcomes for each of
the presidential, Senate, House and Governor races (and see how we are doing
against our predictions), just email us at tom@obameter2012.com and we will send them along to you. Our past users swear by them!
On to the predictions, and here are the headlines:
· Hillary Clinton will
become our 45th President, and
our first woman president, beating Donald Trump comfortably with a 322-216
electoral vote margin. We have her
winning the popular vote 49.3% to 46.8%, with Gary Johnson, Jill Stein and Evan
McMullin picking off 3.8% of the vote.
· Clinton will get to work with a
Democratic majority in the Senate, as the Dems (barely) take back the
Senate 50/50, with new Vice President Tim Kaine wielding the gavel
in the event of ties, and with Chuck Schumer, Clinton’s one-time colleague as Senators from
New York, as Senate Majority Leader. But
we won’t know the final Senate outcome for quite some time, as it will all come
down to a few races that are extraordinarily close.
· Clinton will have to deal with a GOP-controlled House, as the Dems pick up a net of only 5 seats, very
modestly chipping away at a still formidable GOP advantage of 242-193, short of
gaining control by 25 seats. Again, the
exact number will take days to sort out, as invariably some House races may
take days to settle, and some may even end up with recounts or in courts.
· And the GOP will continue
to dominate the state houses; by winning 4 of the 12 gubernatorial races they will hold their 32-17 advantage (with one independent) in governors.
For new readers, here is a summary
of BTRTN's track record in national elections over the years. We
believe our record stands with anyone’s!
Election
|
2008
|
2010
|
2012
|
2014
|
Total
|
Total
%
|
Presidential (states)
|
48/50
|
n/a
|
49/50
|
n/a
|
97/100
|
97.0%
|
Senate
|
35/35
|
33/36
|
31/33
|
32/36
|
131/140
|
93.6%
|
House
|
n/a
|
420/435
|
416/435
|
425/435
|
1261/1305
|
96.6%
|
Governors
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
31/36
|
31/36
|
86.1%
|
TOTAL
|
96.1%
|
This will be a closer race than in 2012. We see 11 races that will be decided by 5
points or less versus 6 in 2012. Obama
ended up beating Romney by 3.9 percentage points in the popular vote. We have Clinton beating Trump by a mere 2.5 points.
But for those of you who still have
doubts that Clinton will win, we offer you these “macro” stats. Of 94 national polls taken since September 1,
Clinton has led in 77, Trump in 11, with 7 ties. And if you take the LA Times tracking poll out,
which is a notoriously self-evident outlier, the numbers are even more one-sided at 77-2-5.
And if you are curious/nervous about
the same figures post-Comey’s-First-Letter, there have been 14 polls since October 28 and
Clinton is 12-1-1 in them, with the one losing poll being, of course, by the LA Times. We are fond of saying that “national polls
don’t matter,” but the fact is, such an overwhelming lead in national polls is not consistent with widespread swing state defeats.
THE PREDICTIONS
President
Hillary Clinton will hold onto the
four “Toss-up D” states that she needed to push over the 270 barrier and
provide a cushion had she lost some of them:
Florida, North Carolina, Michigan and New Hampshire, all of which had
margins of three points or less in the final days. A combination of Comey First Letter
damage running its course as last week wore on; the Comey Second Letter
announcement on Sunday; and the massive Clinton ground game, ad blitz and
surrogate brigade, will combine to build a different kind of wall that will
keep Donald Trump out of the White House.
Trump, for his part, will manage to
hold onto Ohio in a late-night squeaker, plus states he should have won easily,
Georgia, Arizona and Utah, and he will manage to pick-off Obama’s Iowa.
Clinton will be put over the top at 11:35
PM when CNN calls Michigan in her favor. (We have a very sloppy method of predicting
this timing so don’t be surprised if we are well off!)
Here is how every state will go….who
will win, by what margin, and at what time it will be “called” by CNN. (We have no prediction for Trump’s concession
speech – whether he does one and, if so, at what time -- or what he will say.)
BTRTN PREDICTION
|
|||||||||
Popular Vote %
|
Electoral Votes
|
Time race called (EST)
|
|||||||
Clinton
|
Trump
|
Margin
|
Clinton
|
Trump
|
|||||
States
|
2016 Electoral Votes
|
Close Races to Watch
|
Polls Close (Latest)
|
49.3%
|
46.8%
|
2.5%
|
322
|
213
|
|
Indiana
|
11
|
7:00
|
41%
|
51%
|
-10%
|
11
|
7:00
|
||
Kentucky
|
8
|
7:00
|
40%
|
58%
|
-18%
|
8
|
7:00
|
||
Vermont
|
3
|
7:00
|
62%
|
32%
|
30%
|
3
|
7:00
|
||
W. Virginia
|
5
|
7:30
|
33%
|
63%
|
-30%
|
5
|
7:30
|
||
Alabama
|
9
|
8:00
|
38%
|
58%
|
-20%
|
9
|
8:00
|
||
Connecticut
|
7
|
8:00
|
54%
|
42%
|
12%
|
7
|
8:00
|
||
DC
|
3
|
8:00
|
89%
|
10%
|
79%
|
3
|
8:00
|
||
Delaware
|
3
|
8:00
|
56%
|
39%
|
17%
|
3
|
8:00
|
||
Illinois
|
20
|
8:00
|
56%
|
40%
|
16%
|
20
|
8:00
|
||
Maryland
|
10
|
8:00
|
62%
|
36%
|
26%
|
10
|
8:00
|
||
Massachusetts
|
11
|
8:00
|
61%
|
33%
|
28%
|
11
|
8:00
|
||
Mississippi
|
6
|
8:00
|
43%
|
55%
|
-12%
|
6
|
8:00
|
||
Oklahoma
|
7
|
8:00
|
35%
|
60%
|
-25%
|
7
|
8:00
|
||
Rhode Island
|
4
|
8:00
|
55%
|
41%
|
14%
|
4
|
8:00
|
||
Tennessee
|
11
|
8:00
|
42%
|
54%
|
-12%
|
11
|
8:00
|
||
Arkansas
|
6
|
8:30
|
39%
|
59%
|
-20%
|
6
|
8:30
|
||
Kansas
|
6
|
9:00
|
40%
|
56%
|
-16%
|
6
|
9:00
|
||
Louisiana
|
8
|
9:00
|
42%
|
56%
|
-14%
|
8
|
9:00
|
||
N. Dakota
|
3
|
9:00
|
35%
|
59%
|
-24%
|
3
|
9:00
|
||
Nebraska
|
5
|
9:00
|
37%
|
59%
|
-22%
|
5
|
9:00
|
||
New Mexico
|
5
|
9:00
|
48%
|
40%
|
8%
|
5
|
9:00
|
||
New York
|
29
|
9:00
|
58%
|
37%
|
21%
|
29
|
9:00
|
||
S. Dakota
|
3
|
9:00
|
38%
|
57%
|
-19%
|
3
|
9:00
|
||
Wyoming
|
3
|
9:00
|
28%
|
65%
|
-37%
|
3
|
9:00
|
||
Texas
|
38
|
9:00
|
43%
|
53%
|
-10%
|
38
|
9:00
|
||
Maine
|
4
|
8:00
|
52%
|
45%
|
7%
|
3
|
1
|
9:15
|
|
Wisconsin
|
10
|
9:00
|
53%
|
45%
|
8%
|
10
|
9:15
|
||
New Jersey
|
14
|
8:00
|
55%
|
43%
|
12%
|
14
|
9:25
|
||
S. Carolina
|
9
|
7:00
|
45%
|
51%
|
-6%
|
9
|
9:40
|
||
Montana
|
3
|
10:00
|
39%
|
53%
|
-14%
|
3
|
10:00
|
||
Pennsylvania
|
20
|
8:00
|
51%
|
47%
|
4%
|
20
|
10:05
|
||
New Hampshire
|
4
|
8:00
|
50%
|
46%
|
4%
|
4
|
10:10
|
||
Missouri
|
10
|
8:00
|
43%
|
53%
|
-10%
|
10
|
10:20
|
||
Georgia
|
16
|
7:00
|
47%
|
49%
|
-2%
|
16
|
10:30
|
||
Minnesota
|
10
|
9:00
|
52%
|
43%
|
9%
|
10
|
10:35
|
||
Virginia
|
13
|
7:00
|
51%
|
46%
|
5%
|
13
|
10:45
|
||
Utah
|
6
|
10:00
|
26%
|
38%
|
-12%
|
6
|
10:50
|
||
California
|
55
|
11:00
|
60%
|
38%
|
22%
|
55
|
11:00
|
||
Hawaii
|
4
|
11:00
|
58%
|
36%
|
22%
|
4
|
11:00
|
||
Idaho
|
4
|
11:00
|
37%
|
57%
|
-20%
|
4
|
11:00
|
||
Washington
|
12
|
11:00
|
56%
|
42%
|
14%
|
12
|
11:00
|
||
N. Carolina
|
15
|
7:30
|
49%
|
48%
|
1%
|
15
|
11:05
|
||
Iowa
|
6
|
10:00
|
46%
|
51%
|
-5%
|
6
|
11:20
|
||
Oregon
|
7
|
11:00
|
53%
|
43%
|
10%
|
7
|
11:25
|
||
Michigan
|
16
|
8:00
|
50%
|
47%
|
3%
|
16
|
11:35
|
||
Arizona
|
11
|
9:00
|
45%
|
49%
|
-4%
|
11
|
11:45
|
||
Florida
|
29
|
8:00
|
50.5%
|
49.0%
|
1.5%
|
29
|
12:15
|
||
Ohio
|
18
|
7:30
|
48%
|
49%
|
-1%
|
18
|
12:55
|
||
Colorado
|
9
|
9:00
|
48%
|
45%
|
3%
|
9
|
13:15
|
||
Nevada
|
6
|
10:00
|
49.5%
|
48.5%
|
1.0%
|
6
|
14:25
|
||
Alaska
|
3
|
13:00
|
42%
|
50%
|
-8%
|
3
|
15:15
|
Senate
Even we have to admit that control
of the Senate is almost impossible to predict.
There are six races that are Toss-ups now, each within a 2-point or less
margin. New Hampshire is impossibly
tight, and Nevada, Missouri and Pennsylvania are only slightly more
definitively tilting one way or the other.
Indiana and Missouri offer further clues still – but all six are classic
Toss-ups.
BTRTN calls New Hampshire,
Nevada and Pennsylvania in the Dem camp, and those wins will be just enough to eke out 50
states and, with the Clinton win, give the Dems control of the Senate. It won’t happen early. Make plenty of coffee and bring snacks to
await this outcome.
BTRTN PREDICTION
|
|||||||
Dem
|
GOP
|
||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Dem
|
GOP
|
Poll Margin as of 11/7
|
BTRTN Rating as of
11/7
|
50
|
50
|
Not running
|
36
|
30
|
|||||
California
|
D
|
Harris
|
Sanchez (D)
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
New York
|
D
|
Schumer
|
Long
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Maryland
|
D
|
Van Hollen
|
Szeliga
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Hawaii
|
D
|
Schatz
|
Carroll
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Oregon
|
D
|
Wyden
|
Callaghan
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Vermont
|
D
|
Leahy
|
Milne
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Connecticut
|
D
|
Blumenthal
|
Carter
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Washington
|
D
|
Murray
|
Vance
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Colorado
|
D
|
Bennet
|
Glenn
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Illinois
|
R
|
Duckworth
|
Kirk
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Wisconsin
|
R
|
Feingold
|
Johnson
|
D + 2
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
R
|
McGinty
|
Toomey
|
D + 2
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Nevada
|
D
|
Cortez Masto
|
Heck
|
D + 2
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
New Hamp.
|
R
|
Hassan
|
Ayotte
|
D + 0
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Missouri
|
R
|
Kander
|
Blunt
|
R + 0
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
N. Carolina
|
R
|
Ross
|
Burr
|
R + 1
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Indiana
|
R
|
Bayh
|
Young
|
R + 4
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Florida
|
R
|
Murphy
|
Rubio
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Kentucky
|
R
|
Gray
|
Paul
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Ohio
|
R
|
Strickland
|
Portman
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Arkansas
|
R
|
Eldridge
|
Boozman
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Iowa
|
R
|
Judge
|
Grassley
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Georgia
|
R
|
Barksdale
|
Isakson
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Kansas
|
R
|
Wiesner
|
Moran
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
S. Carolina
|
R
|
Dixon
|
Scott
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Arizona
|
R
|
Kirkpatrick
|
McCain
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Utah
|
R
|
Snow
|
Lee
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
N. Dakota
|
R
|
Grassheim
|
Hoeven
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Oklahoma
|
R
|
Workman
|
Lankford
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
S. Dakota
|
R
|
Williams
|
Thune
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Alabama
|
R
|
Crumpton
|
Shelby
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Alaska
|
R
|
Metcalfe
|
Murkowski
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Idaho
|
R
|
Sturgill
|
Crapo
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Louisiana
|
R
|
24 cand.'s
|
Dec runoff
|
Solid R
|
1
|
House
The Dems will fall well short of a "wave" to regain control, picking up only five seats, perhaps the true casualty
of the Comey escapade. The Dems might
have picked up 15-20 had it not been for the downballot fall-out from the first
letter.
Below are listed just the 49 races
that we consider competitive.
BTRTN PREDICTION
|
|||||
Proj. Dem
|
Proj. GOP
|
||||
State
|
Dist.
|
Incumbent (188 D- 237 R)
|
BTRTN Rating as of
11/7
|
193
|
242
|
188 D - 247 R
|
|||||
New York
|
3
|
D
|
Likely D
|
1
|
|
California
|
24
|
D
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
California
|
7
|
D
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
Florida
|
13
|
R
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
Nevada
|
4
|
R
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
New Hampshire
|
1
|
R
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
Arizona
|
1
|
D
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
Minnesota
|
2
|
R
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Minnesota
|
8
|
D
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Nebraska
|
2
|
D
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Iowa
|
1
|
R
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Nevada
|
3
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
New Jersey
|
5
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Florida
|
18
|
D
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Illinois
|
10
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Texas
|
23
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Florida
|
26
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Maine
|
2
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
19
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
22
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
8
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
California
|
49
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Colorado
|
6
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Virginia
|
10
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Florida
|
7
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
California
|
10
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Michigan
|
1
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
1
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Kansas
|
3
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
California
|
25
|
R
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
Iowa
|
3
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
24
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Utah
|
4
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Michigan
|
7
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Minnesota
|
3
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Wisconsin
|
8
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
California
|
21
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Indiana
|
9
|
R
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
16
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Virginia
|
5
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Alaksa
|
1
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Arizona
|
2
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Colorado
|
3
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Michigan
|
8
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Montana
|
1
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
23
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Illinois
|
12
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
Indiana
|
2
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
|
New York
|
21
|
R
|
Likely R
|
1
|
Governors
This is a bit of an off-year for
State Houses, with only 12 races in total.
And despite the fact that the Dems have only 18 Governors overall, there
was little chance for change, since 8 of them were up for reelection, versus
only 4 of the 31 Republicans governors (there is one Independent Governor, in
Alaska, and he is not up for reelection).
With such a stacked deck, we see the
GOP holding serve, continuing to hold 31 Governorships to 18 for the Dems.
The big action here will be in 2018,
when there will be 36 state houses on the line – heading into the 2020 census
which will guide congressional redistricting, and the next round of
gerrymandering games. Those who control
state houses and legislatures dictate those terms, with huge national
implications.
BTRTN PREDICTION
|
|||||||
Proj. Dem
|
Proj. GOP
|
||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
GOP
|
GOP
|
Poll Margin as of 11/7
|
BTRTN Rating as of
11/7
|
8
|
4
|
Delaware
|
D
|
Carney
|
Bonini
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Oregon
|
D
|
Brown
|
Pierce
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
Washington
|
D
|
Inslee
|
Bryant
|
Solid D
|
1
|
||
New Hamp.
|
D
|
Sununu
|
Ostern
|
D + 11
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
Indiana
|
R
|
Gregg
|
Holcomb
|
D + 4
|
Lean D
|
1
|
|
N. Carolina
|
R
|
Cooper
|
McCrory
|
D + 2
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Missouri
|
D
|
Koster
|
Greitens
|
D + 2
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Montana
|
D
|
Bullock
|
Gianforte
|
D + 1
|
Toss-up D
|
1
|
|
Vermont
|
D
|
Minter
|
Scott
|
R + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
1
|
|
W. Virginia
|
D
|
Justice
|
Cole
|
R + 6
|
Lean R
|
1
|
|
N. Dakota
|
R
|
Nelson
|
Burgum
|
Solid R
|
1
|
||
Utah
|
R
|
Weinholtz
|
Herbert
|
Solid R
|
1
|
There you go…our predictions for all 538 races (55 separate presidential electoral vote races including the 50 states, the District of Columbia and
two congressional districts in each of Maine and Nebraska; 36 Senate races; 12
Governors and all 435 House seats) that will dictate the state of our world for
the next decade or more. But that future
could hang on just one of them, whether it is Florida or North Carolina or Michigan or the tiny second Congressional District in Maine, and that one race could be decided in
the wee hours of the night, or even later.
Get out to vote tomorrow, make some calls, and then fasten your seat belts for an historic night.
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