Posted on 10/28/2004 6:13:20 PM PDT by swilhelm73
Election Predictions!!!! Kristol, Barnes, Last, Matus, Tell, Labash, and the rest go out on a limb for Bush, Kerry, and Congress. by Weekly Standard Staff 10/28/2004 3:00:00 PM Increase Font Size Printer-Friendly
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William Kristol
Bush wins Popular Vote: 52% Bush - 47% Kerry Electoral College: 348 Bush - 190 Kerry
Senate: 54 (R), 46 (D)
House: 232 (R), 202 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: Tom Daschle loses to John Thune in South Dakota.
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Stephen Hayes
Kerry wins Popular Vote: 50% Kerry - 48% Bush Electoral College: 291 Kerry - 247 Bush
Senate: 52 (R), 47 (D), 1 (I)
House: 230 (R), 205 (D)
Dark horse: Wisconsin, long regarded as the clean government state, will be so overwhelmed with voter fraud that pundits in 2008 will speak of avoiding the "Wisconsin problem." Bonus prediction: Packers beat Redskins 38-17.
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Fred Barnes
Bush wins Popular Vote: 52% Bush - 47% Kerry Electoral College: 306 Bush - 232 Kerry
Senate: 54 (R), 46 (D)
House: 234 (R), 201 (D)
Dark horse: Dalton Tanonaka (R) upsets Congressman Neil Abercrombie (D) in Hawaii.
Bonus dark horse: Referenda to ban same-sex marriage win in all 11 states.
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Victorino Matus
Kerry wins Popular Vote: 49% Kerry - 47% Bush Electoral College: Kerry 285 - Bush 253
Senate: 49 (R), 50 (D), 1 (I)
House: 226 (R), 206 (D), 3 (I)
Dark horse: An upset is brewing in the Colorado Senate race--Pete Coors makes a comeback . . . and (t)wins!
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Jonathan V. Last
Bush wins Popular Vote: 54% Bush - 46% Kerry Electoral College: 293 Bush - 245 Kerry
Senate: 54 (R), 46 (D)
House: 234 (R), 200 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: Alan Keyes fails to garner even 35% of the vote in Illinois, dooming the state Republican party for years. And despite losing the popular vote decisively, Kerry challenges the election based on results in a few key states.
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Matt Labash
Kerry wins Popular Vote: 50% Kerry - 49% Bush Electoral College: 295 Kerry - 243 Bush
Senate: 52 (R), 47 (D), 1 (I)
House: 234 (R) - 201 (D)
Dark horse: Barack Obama suffers devastating election-day backlash. Alan Keyes loses by a mere 47 points.
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Terry Eastland
Bush wins Popular Vote: 50% Bush - 49% Kerry Electoral College: 296 Bush -242 Kerry
Senate: 543 (R), 46 (D), 1 (I)
House: 230 (R), 205 (D)
Dark horse: Kerry takes Florida and Pennsylvania, but the Midwest goes for Bush as values voters decide the election--at least on the initial count. Kerry goes to court in states where the margin of victory in each is less than 537 votes: Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Chaos ensues as lawyers take over, but only Minnesota shifts to Kerry, making the final tally 286-252.
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David Tell
Bush wins Popular Vote: Bush 48.8% - Kerry 49.4% Electoral College count known on 11/3/04: Bush 232 - Kerry 231 Electoral College on 1/20/05: Bush 270 - Kerry 267
Senate: 52 (R), 47 (D), 1 (I)
House: 231 (R), 203 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: Some combination of (A) logistical difficulties produced by absentee, provisional, and mail-in ballots; (B) statutorily required recounts; (C) partisan litigation; and (D) Hawaii's time zone will delay the final Electoral College count for at least a week. A "faithless elector" in West Virginia robs Bush of one vote to which he would otherwise be entitled. Democrats in Congress begin a major push to abolish the Electoral College. Defeated for reelection, former Sen. Tom Daschle of South Dakota is no longer around to stop them.
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Katherine Mangu-Ward
Bush wins Popular Vote: 50% Bush - 50% Kerry Electoral College: 269 Bush - 269 Kerry--Republican House decides for Bush
Senate: 51 (D), 49 (R)
House: Republicans retain control (who knows by how much) but I predict an upset in Vermont, knocking Bernie Sanders out of his seat and finally eliminating the irritating "1" in the "Other" category in all these tallies
Dark horse: Hillary Clinton for VP. Obviously, this is a very dark horse. But here's how it's possible: When the House decides the outcome for president (as it will in the event of an Electoral College tie), the Senate chooses the vice president. But it's not the current Senate that decides, it's the newly elected Senate. I predict that Democrats take control of the Senate, ditch Edwards, and install Hillary, thus giving her a fantastic (if unorthodox) launch pad for her 2008 presidential campaign.
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Richard Starr
Bush wins Popular Vote: 49.9% Bush - 49.1% Kerry Electoral College: 283 Bush - 255 Kerry
Senate: 50 (R), 50 (D)
House: 228 (R) 206 (D)
Dark horse: Kerry calls off the lawyers and doesn't litigate the outcome.
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David Skinner
Bush wins Popular Vote: 51% Bush - 49% Kerry Electoral College: 271 Bush - 267 Kerry
Senate: 54 (R), 46 (D)
House: 234 (R), 200 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: In District 8 of Virginia, Jim Moran will lose. I've seen no polls on this, and Moran has had more money to spend than his challenger, Lisa Marie Cheney, an unknown whose only TV ad is mediocre. But here's the thing: Every local voter I know who has an opinion of Moran has a negative opinion of him.
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Matthew Continetti
Bush wins Popular Vote: 50% Bush - 49% Kerry Electoral College: Bush 281 - Kerry 257.
Senate: 51 (R), 48 (D), 1 (I)
House: 233 (R), 202 (D)
Dark horse: Swift Boat Veteran for Truth John O'Neill emerges as frontrunner for the 2008 Republican nomination.
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Rachel DiCarlo
Bush wins Popular Vote: 51% Bush - 48% Kerry Electoral College: 298 Bush - 240 Kerry
Senate: 53 (R), 46 (D), 1 (I)
House: 228 (R), 206 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: Thune pulls it off in South Dakota.
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Michael Goldfarb
Bush wins Popular Vote: 50% Bush - 49% Kerry Electoral College: 297 Bush - 241 Kerry
Senate: 53 (R), 46 (D), 1 (I)
House: 235 (R), 200 (D)
Dark horse: Bush will win my home state, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
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Duncan Currie
Bush wins Popular Vote: 52% Bush - 47% Kerry Electoral College: 286 Bush -252 Kerry
Senate: 54 (R), 45 (D), 1 (I)
House: 229 (R), 207 (D), 1 (I)
Dark horse: John Thune takes down Tom Daschle in South Dakota. Oh, and whatever happens on election night, Terry McAuliffe will spin it as "a very good night for Democrats" (or something like that).
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Bush - 327
Kerry - 211
Darkhorse - Kerry ends up crying so much on TV that the Heinz heiress dumps his flip flopping butt.
Don't have a clue about Alaska.
The races that will really turn for the GOP are the races that have been turned into a referendum on the President.
If Bush gets 404 electorial votes -- I will donate $500 dollars to the charity of your choice. I appreciate the enthusiasm -- but there is no scenario -- none -- under which that can happen.
He will be lucky under vurtually every scenario to break 300.
I tend to agree. The good news, however, is that I'm a horrible election predictor.
404 included my admitted overzealous addition of California (where I vote).
I'll start thinking of charities though... ;-)
Cheney campaigning in Iowa today.
I predict I'll get to see Brokaw and Ted Koepell cry again like in 2000. "Well - it looks like we lost" as Brokaw's eyes teared over.
Well, he has about as much insight as any of us here! LOL
Conventional wisdom says this will be as close or closer than the 200 election...
...the only thing I know for sure is that conventional wisdom is usually wrong.
I also like Barnes' prediction.
I predict Bush 360 - worst case if he loses HI and OR 340. Which is about in the ballpark. Congress: House Of Representatives 236 R, 198 D, 1 IND; Senate, 54 R, 45 D, 1 IND. That's as good as it gets Tuesday.
I feel one coming on already!
We wouldn't even have to worry if we had a fair media!
Bush and Kerry split the vote. Election is contested in court for 8 months. Lawyers win.
I don't think so. #1. It is old news. #2. War is never pretty. It's a given. #3. Bush is not responsible for every detail -- just as he is not responsible for the flu shot shortage. #4. The Democrats have said there wasn't any stuff like this over there -- now they say there was --they have it so twisted that it will be hard for the general public to follow.
whatever happens on election night, Terry McAuliffe will spin it as "a very good night for Democrats" (or something like that).
I would love to see this again
I could be wrong, but I certainly hope not. Having an ultra-liberal like Senator Kerry as President would be a foreign policy disaster beyond imagination; he might even be able to find someone worse than Madeleine Albright to serve as American Secretary of State.
Interesting factoid; I was about to suggest half-jokingly that Senator Kerry would nominate the Communist Party U.S.A.'s candidate as Secretary of State as a gesture of solidarity, so I went to the Communist Party's website to see who it was.
Well, lo and behold, their candidate this year is John Kerry. That's right: the choice of our home-grown ultra-liberals is good old Massassachusetts ultra-liberal Senator Kerry. Upon reflection, it's logical enough; Senator Kerry has a life rating of 5 from the American Conservative Union (and that's a scale of 0-100). They try to evade actually "endorsing" him, but it is clear that this is exactly what they intend:
The red-baiting forgeries are just another part of the Bush campaign which is running on lies and fear. So, for the record, the CPUSA position on the 2004 elections:
1. The CPUSA is doing our utmost to help defeat Bush.
We're deeply concerned about the great dangers of a second Bush term, as is the majority of the country and world and every major progressive organization. On a wide range of key issues (Social security, healthcare, reproductive rights, overtime pay, minimum wage, and much more), there are real, substantial differences between Bush and Kerry.
2. The CPUSA does not endorse any candidate for President in the 2004 election.
We do not endorse the candidates of other political parties. We
have refrained from fielding our own candidate so as not to
distract from the main effort of defeating Bush and the
ultra-riight extremist agenda.
3. The CPUSA has it's own independent political platform for the 2004 elections.
Though our platform goes much further towards full social justice than
Kerry's, to win any of it requires defeating Bush. A movement
that can break the Republican stranglehold on government could
then win social progress on many fronts.
So a vote for President Bush this year is even more directly a vote against Communism than usual (however, from looking at various websites, it doesn't appear that they have run their own candidate since Gus Hall in 1984 -- my guess is that the Democrats have been left-wing enough to satisfy the Communists ;-)
And a vote for Senator Kerry is exactly what the Communist Party USA wants. What clearer choice could there be? An appeaser of Chamberlain's stature, or a proven leader in the War on Terror? A man who we know where he stands, or a flip-flopper whose opinions change as quickly as the breeze does and whose instincts are left-wing?
I think the choice will be President Bush, with 400+ votes in the Electoral College.
That would be a first.
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