Jaw
It's OVER 5,000!
Ahh, Nate Silver. His reasoning on Florida is interesting:
He does realize those people were still allowed to vote for the statewide elections, right?
And then this:
Can anyone think of a past Presidential candidate who has outperformed his party in all of those states, and who Silver and the polling industry have already underestimated, and who is a likely candidate for 2020?
Democrats won uncontested races in Florida’s 10th, 14th, 21st and 24th congressional districts. Based on the results from uncontested congressional districts in states other than Florida on Tuesday night, I estimate that each one would have given Democrats about 180,000 votes if they’d been counted.
He does realize those people were still allowed to vote for the statewide elections, right?
And then this:
States shaded in light blue were won by Democrats, but by fewer than 5 percentage points. So it’s noteworthy which states are not in light blue but solid blue instead. Democrats won the popular vote in Michigan by 7 percentage points, in Wisconsin by 8 points, in Pennsylvania by 10 points, and in Minnesota by 11 points.
Can anyone think of a past Presidential candidate who has outperformed his party in all of those states, and who Silver and the polling industry have already underestimated, and who is a likely candidate for 2020?
He made a bit more sense here, but I would have said that getting stuck in between the two paths is a serious concern for both parties in the next election, not just for the Democrats. We can probably look forward to a contentious two years leading up to 2020, with both sides doing their best to poison the political environment and rile up their base.Getting stuck in between the Northern Path and the Sunbelt Strategy is a big risk for Democrats: where their Electoral College problems become most acute.