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Congratulations, President . . . McCain
self | 11/1/08 | LS

Posted on 11/01/2008 4:44:51 PM PDT by LS

These are words that are, actually, somewhat difficult for me to say. John McCain wasn't my favorite candidate in the primaries. For the better part of eight years, he's been on the wrong side of many crucial issues. So I am not making this prediction based on any love of my former Arizona senator. (And forgive me for a slightly windy post, but I want to provide evidence for my congratulatory note.)

A week ago ("Don't Look Now . . . But There Won't Be an Obama Swag-Bag"), I warned that the numbers in the early voting were not sufficient for the Messiah to win---not in Colorado, not in Florida, and at the time, barely enough to carry California. Since then, the numbers in CO have improved for Obama, but in my view not nearly enough. The numbers in Florida remain daunting for him, and California still is stunningly close in terms of Democrat/Republican splits. Based on that, and some other factors, I predicted there would be no Obama victory, and no Obama "Swag-Bag." (Did anyone see the Obama voter who said the Messiah would pay off her mortgage and pay for her gas!?)

The developments in the past week have, if anything, strengthened my conviction that McCain will be inaugurated next January.

High numbers of undecideds remain in the major national polls. According to Dick Morris, "An undecided has already decided not to vote for Obama." While his claim that undecideds---based on a FOX poll---would go for McCain at a clip of 7:1 is, I think, exaggerated, our own Freeper kesg has made a similar argument. It's all about what he calls the 'death line' of 48% for Obama. In only a couple of polls, with drastic manipulations involving oversampling of Democrats, has Obama crossed that line.

Even National Review's anonymous sage "Obi Wan" doesn't seem to fully appreciate the significance of Obama's inability to "close the deal" at that number.

Then there is the completely un-discussed (save for conservative sites) phenomenon of Rush Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos." This was real, it registered thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of temporary Democrat voters who are "coming home." Then there are the disaffected Hillary voters---call them PUMAs, if you will---but they do constitute some percentage of the Democrat electorate that the media has been entirely unwilling to acknowledge. Sources tell me that while MI will still land firmly in Obama's column, his lead there has been cut by shocking levels due almost entirely to a scorched earth policy by the PUMAs and the 527s.

Taken together, however, these two groups of "Democrats" (one faux, one real but angry) are tiny compared to the number of white Democrats who think their party has been hijacked by a terrorist. Again, to the drive-by media, such people don't exist. To admit they were real---let alone in numbers---would destroy the entire mythos of the "surge in voter registrations." I'll say more of this in a moment, but for now, I predict---out on a limb here---that Obama will barely come close to Kerry's 2004 Democrat support number.

What does all this mean for the states? With indies breaking at a far higher rate for McCain than Obama, and with large segments of the Democrats voting Republican, you are likely to see both a very high level of Republican support for McCain (probably in the 90s), combined with a significant level of Dem support and late breaking independents. That breaks down to:

*CO will be Republican by about 2 points.

*NV will be a 2 point or better final for McCain.

*MO will be a 4 or 5 point McCain win.

*NM will end up a 2-point McCain loss.

*We will bring in OH at 2 or 3 points---better than Bush did in 04.

*FL will be a double digit McCain lead. GA and NC won't be that close.

*Here's the clincher: the southern part of VA, combined with the west, will give McCain a 1- to 2-point win in the Old Dominion.

*I won't predict NH, IA, or PA. These are very, very close. If I had to guess, I'd say McCain wins NH, loses PA by razor thin margins---but there's that darned "Bradley Effect," and it is real, and it may well bring PA along.

There are other dynamics at work that could, in fact, blow this open a tad for McCain (i.e., bring in IA, PA, NM, and even WI). First, GOPTrust is running $7 million---that's right, $7 million---in devastatingly effective Jeremiah Wright ads this weekend. McCain's support with the oldsters has been somewhat soft due to claims he'll "cut" Social Security, but these ads will scare the bejeezus out of them, and with good reason.

Second, Zogby's overnight not only had it a 1-point McCain lead, but noted that a very good Obama night was dropping off the rolling three-night average. Now, I know, it's the Zogs special sauce. Isn't IDB or Battleground supposed to be better? Well, it actually depends. I think Zogs has been so volatile because his poll has been extremely sensitive to rapid changes. The others have not been as, well, "emotional." Hence, they've stabilized (Battleground at under 4, IBD Tipp at 4 to 5). However, the McCain team said their polling showed that Obama lost ground with the infomercial. The polls didn't pick it up Friday because of the Halloween effect---families (otherwise known as Republican voters) were out with their kids. I think Zogs picked up that post-infomercial shift. Hello, Dickie Morris.

Battleground's "Battleground State" poll, in a little-reported item, noted that all the battleground states were within a point. It then did not define what these states were (hence, I think FL is excluded) but did include NM and IA. New Mexico? I thought Obama had this locked up in 2006!

Finally, the clincher in all this, as it has always been, is the white Democrat vote. And it was "early voting"---contrary to all conventional wisdom---where Obama lost the election. The drive-bys are obsessed with black turnout early (some indicators STILL don't convince me that it will equal Algore's 2000 level turnout, but I could be wrong on this, and it still won't matter).

The critical element of the "early" black vote that all pundits have missed is reflected in the Morris "7:1" comment. In normal elections, cameras go to polling places and show lines. High turnout, low turnout, but the crowds are almost always mixed. This year, "early" voting, combined with the emphasis on Obama's race (and he has run the most racist campaign since Bull Conner), the images have overwhelmingly been of . . . crowds of black voters.

By itself, this would disturb no one, until Obama begins to talk about "spreading the wealth around," and anyone making over (pick a number) $200,000 will see a "patriotic" tax increase and (feel a chill yet?) saying this will be a "transformational" election.

When the camera shots of the lines of black voters is combined with the rhetoric about "he's going to pay my mortgage and pay for my gas," working-class whites (indeed, everyone) starts to get a little antsy. No doubt, more than a few Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Missouri voters suddenly conjured up the Reconstruction images of "Birth of a Nation." "Do people on welfare really think after November 4 they will be moving into my house?" they ask. The House's hearings on nationalizing 401(k)s has percolated into the electorate, including the oldsters.

If I am proven right on November 5, and John McCain is elected president, it will be due to the incredibly stupid, wasteful ad spending by Obama for four months that was forgotten in the last 72 hours; it will be due the early voting that reinforced in the minds of the middle-class and white voters of all economic backgrounds that when Obama says he wants to "spread the wealth around," he really is coming for MY house.

And above all---let's give credit where credit is due---it will be because of a relentless performance by Sarah Palin, a brilliantly choreographed campaign by McCain's managers, and to the gritty, plodding but oh-so-successful turtle from Arizona.


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: 2004; election; mccain; obama; palin; sarahpalin
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1 posted on 11/01/2008 4:44:51 PM PDT by LS
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To: LS

CAVEAT: I could be full of macaca. On Wednesday, if I’m wrong, the macaca thread starts here. I expect no fewer than 500 posts.


2 posted on 11/01/2008 4:46:00 PM PDT by LS ("Castles made of sand, fall in the sea . . . eventually." (Hendrix))
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To: LS

Don’t jinx it ok...........let’s just hope you are right.


3 posted on 11/01/2008 4:46:30 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heros have always been cowboys--Reagan and Bush)
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To: LS

bump


4 posted on 11/01/2008 4:46:35 PM PDT by Zechariah11 (Yeah, sure, Barack. . . . And Billy Graham "led me" to embrace Islam.)
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To: LS

From your keybaord to God’s ears ... may it be so.


5 posted on 11/01/2008 4:49:11 PM PDT by Moomah
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To: LS

bttt


6 posted on 11/01/2008 4:49:41 PM PDT by Matchett-PI (2008 = The Year of the Toilet (for 'rats))
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To: LS

Bump.


7 posted on 11/01/2008 4:49:57 PM PDT by GoSarah
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To: LS

What is your prediction of McCain’s home state?


8 posted on 11/01/2008 4:50:07 PM PDT by BGHater (The GOP, the new DNC.)
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To: LS

Obama Fear Factor is strong. We do not even know if he was born in this country!


9 posted on 11/01/2008 4:50:16 PM PDT by FreedBird
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To: LS

AMEN!

Colorado stats haven’t improved much for Zero. He still has to pull an inside straight to win CO. He is underperforming his party ID by 2-3 points even in polls. In CO he is even to +1.5% in the early vote. The GOTV machine in CO will blow his ass out of the water. Great analysis though.


10 posted on 11/01/2008 4:51:23 PM PDT by johncocktoasten (Obama/Biden '08, in and of itself, A Bridge To Nowhere)
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To: LS

Well, I can’t say I’ve looked anywhere near as much into this, but even if you wind up being wrong I don’t think you’re full of macaca.


11 posted on 11/01/2008 4:52:07 PM PDT by sionnsar (Obama?Bye-den!|Iran Azadi|5yst3m 0wn3d-it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY)|http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com/)
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To: LS

It makes me feel warm and fuzzy. Thanks!


12 posted on 11/01/2008 4:54:58 PM PDT by BreezyDog
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To: LS
Also, I read that Zogby actually splits his polling day to include the daytime and the previous evening. So his +1 McCain lead includes the evening of Oct 30th and then the day of Oct 31st. He may yet see Halloween effect, but we'll see.
13 posted on 11/01/2008 4:55:09 PM PDT by GoSarah
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To: LS

Thanks for your customarily thoughtful insights.

Best of all for you, I agree!


14 posted on 11/01/2008 4:58:41 PM PDT by Cedric
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To: LS
Let's see where Obama is today in NV and CO. If he has those states locked up, why has he put in an appearance? Barry's no landslide winner. Look at Sarah Palin's rally numbers in PA and contrast them with whom Joe Biden attracted: I don't think there's a doubt McCain will win the Keystone State. McCain will carry NC and VA comfortably and win NH flipping that for NM - which Obama hasn't visited because his numbers tell him its a lock. Obama's going to visit OH again tomorrow - not a lock. Safe for McCain as is FL. There could be surprise GOP pickups of WI and MN during the night. MI is not in the cards on account of Detroit but Macomb and Oakland counties - Reagan Democrat territory will keep Obama's victory margin within 2%. So let's review briefly: McCain is doing good in Red States and Obama is struggling just to be competitive in battleground states. That's the story of Election 2008.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus

15 posted on 11/01/2008 4:59:10 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: LS
McCain was my least favorite candidate. I commented that I'd have to buy clothes pins to put on my nose when I voted for him in this presidential election. I voted for my favorite candidate in the primary and it wasn't McCain. My pick had stepped aside and was supporting McCain and was still on the Texas ballot so I voted for him.

Thanks to Sarah Palin I have become excited and will need NO clothes pins when I vote for the McCain/Palin Ticket. The horror of BHO has even made me kinda forget why I didn't like McCain. ;o) [I hope when he takes over as President...he doesn't soon make me remember why I always pretty much disliked him...I'm even working for the McCain campaign...wonders never cease.]

16 posted on 11/01/2008 4:59:13 PM PDT by shield (A wise man's heart is at his RIGHT hand;but a fool's heart at his LEFT. Ecc 10:2)
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To: LS

Thanks, hope you’re right, agree about McCain.

When asked, I say that I could argue forcefully for either conclusion, but I’m thinking (and praying!) that McCain will pull it out.

Not that I’m enthusiastic about a McCain presidency, but that I am VERY enthusiastic about a NOT-OBAMA presidency.

Then, as I told my 13yo, I pray Obama is genuinely converted to Christ, gets some real Biblical discipling, gets a Biblical worldview, changes his life, racks up some real and good accomplishments, and runs and wins another time.


17 posted on 11/01/2008 5:00:08 PM PDT by BibChr ("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
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To: LS
If I had to guess, I'd say McCain wins NH, loses PA by razor thin margins

Amazing. I posted earlier we'd have to cross our fingers for PA only to get called names and cussed a blue streak for stepping out of line.

18 posted on 11/01/2008 5:00:54 PM PDT by itsthejourney (1 of every 10 people you pass in the mall is here illegally... including Aunt Zeituni)
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To: Chet 99; DesertRhino; ExTexasRedhead; Frantzie; GOP_Lady; HamiltonJay; impeachedrapist; ...

ping


19 posted on 11/01/2008 5:01:30 PM PDT by Perdogg (Raila Amollo Odinga - community organizer)
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To: LS
I just told a pollster I was an 25 year old Black Female Democrat who voted for Kerry in 2004 and will be voting for McCain this year.

None of that is true except the female and voting for McCain.

I wonder how many other people fool with pollsters this way?
20 posted on 11/01/2008 5:01:44 PM PDT by elizabetty (RIP -- Dean Barnett. 27 October 2008)
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