Brainster
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 26, 2006
- Messages
- 21,944
Al Giordano says no:
A little bombastic there. Giordano cites this article which says:
Of course, favorable ratings are only useful to the extent that people actually follow through and vote for the candidate. According to CNN's exit polling (admittedly inexact), here are the percentage of white voters voting for Barack Obama in the last several primaries:
Pennsylvania: 37%
Mississippi: 28.5%
Ohio: 31.8%
Texas: 41%
Rhode Island: 34%
Vermont: 59%
Compare those numbers to his results in February:
Wisconsin: 54%
Virginia: 50.4%
California: 45%
I've ignored the caucus states and Hawaii, New York and Illinois, states where there is an obvious home field advantage for one candidate or the other. In February, Obama was competitive against Hillary for the White vote, but since then (with the notable exception of Vermont) he has struggled to break 40%.
One oddball thing I noted: Obama does better with White independents than he does with White Democrats.
Note: I am not making any claims about why White voters seem to be turning away from Obama. Voting for a presidential candidate is a complex process. I don't know if a candidate getting less than 40% of the White vote in the Democratic primaries means that candidate can't win in the general election. Certainly the independent twist is interesting; one must assume that White Democrats are more likely to vote for the Democratic candidate than White independents, right? So perhaps the fact that White Democrats are turning away from Obama is not as bad as it might sound.
Thoughts?
I turn on the TV, read the political columnists (and a significant number of analytically-challenged bloggers, too) and all I hear is a bunch of white folk prattling on about their favorite narrative: "Obama's losing white voters!"
They've swallowed the Clinton racially-obsessed spin, hook, line and sinker. Some, because they are gullible, haven't an original idea in their little pea brains, and follow the pack of what everybody else is talking about. Others, because they like to toss around knowing falsehoods.
A little bombastic there. Giordano cites this article which says:
The question is this: Have white Democrats soured on Obama? Apparently not. Although his unfavorable rating from the group is up five percentage points since last summer in polls conducted by The New York Times and CBS News, his favorable rating is up just as much.
On the other hand, black Democrats’ opinion of Hillary Clinton has deteriorated substantially (her favorable rating among them is down 36 percentage points over the same period).
Of course, favorable ratings are only useful to the extent that people actually follow through and vote for the candidate. According to CNN's exit polling (admittedly inexact), here are the percentage of white voters voting for Barack Obama in the last several primaries:
Pennsylvania: 37%
Mississippi: 28.5%
Ohio: 31.8%
Texas: 41%
Rhode Island: 34%
Vermont: 59%
Compare those numbers to his results in February:
Wisconsin: 54%
Virginia: 50.4%
California: 45%
I've ignored the caucus states and Hawaii, New York and Illinois, states where there is an obvious home field advantage for one candidate or the other. In February, Obama was competitive against Hillary for the White vote, but since then (with the notable exception of Vermont) he has struggled to break 40%.
One oddball thing I noted: Obama does better with White independents than he does with White Democrats.
Note: I am not making any claims about why White voters seem to be turning away from Obama. Voting for a presidential candidate is a complex process. I don't know if a candidate getting less than 40% of the White vote in the Democratic primaries means that candidate can't win in the general election. Certainly the independent twist is interesting; one must assume that White Democrats are more likely to vote for the Democratic candidate than White independents, right? So perhaps the fact that White Democrats are turning away from Obama is not as bad as it might sound.
Thoughts?