Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Retro-active Election Night

**UPDATE**

Many thanks to those who fought their way through all of this.  Yesterday Florida was officially called for President Obama, bringing the electoral total to 332-206, and he officially won the popular vote as well.

More importantly, Romney's failure to secure Florida ruins my prediction.  Congrats to Professor Josh Putnam at Davidson, whose algorithms perfectly predicted the election.  Unfortunately, this final state drops me to 50/51, or an underwhelming 98.04%.  When it became official, well I think this is the best approximation of my reaction.

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If you were under a solid, sound-proof, cable-less, calendar-less rock until just now, there was an election yesterday.  If you were sad about the fact that I was almost silent on social media during the course of the evening's event (with the exception of a few likes on Facebook), don’t worry we’ll find you a support group and there are plenty of others like you.  I opted not to live tweet last night, mostly because I had too much energy and wasn’t really on Twitter at all.  Fortunately, however, I kept a running diary.  You will note I highlighted states I covered in my first prediction post.  You will also note my new found frustration with CNN after they caused me to barely miss on some time predictions from my second post.  After a bit of editing and touching up (external links are in grey), here is how last night unfolded.
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5:14PM
On my way home, moved to kick a pinecone off the sidewalk.  Realized just in time that it was actually a bird all puffed up and, I assume, frozen.  Plus, we don’t have pinecones here.  I don’t know what this means, just felt like it was an omen.

5:48PM
CNN teases everyone with their “first exit poll” results, which turns out to just be a brief segment on what people said was the most important issue to them.  Unsurprisingly, 60% said the economy.  Coming in 4th on this list was “which candidate is least likely to continue abusing their campaign email list”.  7th was “I’m not sure if Sarah Palin is still in this election or not but I think she’s a maverick.”

6:08PM
CNN drones on about the demographics in the election, stating “we can’t say much about exit polls until all polls close, but we’re going to hint at it to fill the next hour anyway.”

6:12PM
Channel switch happens in time for my dad and I to catch Rachel Maddow glowing on MSNBC about how their “toss up” electronic map is working perfectly. Already regretting this switch.

6:26PM
First votes in from New Hampshire!  And the tally is…28-14 Obama.  He’s up 67-33%. Guess we can go ahead and call that state with 1% reporting.  Notably, it is hilarious that 42 votes apparently represent 1% of New Hampshire’s population.

6:31PM
I tried switching to FoxNews.  They were at a commercial.  At least I tried.  Back to my Chinese food.

6:49PM
Rachel Maddow follows up an Alex Wagner segment by calling Alex’s “hot topics,” “a bit creepy, but appropriately named.”  Down Rachel; down girl.

6:55PM
Momentarily flare up when a ticker on CNN shows Mourdock up in Indiana by a few thousand votes.  Only 4% of the vote is in.  I’m only a little edgy.  Ma! The meatloaf!

Three minutes later, a CNN field reporter tells Anderson Cooper, “the numbers will be coming in soon. Real numbers.”

7:00PM
Polls close in Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, South Carolina, Vermont, and Virginia.

Two of the three states I’ve projected to close in the next half hour are called (by CNN…which is probably what I’m going to use as a barometer), Kentucky and Vermont.  Boom and boom.  And Virginia comes up at 49 a piece.  Ruh-roh! (How is there not a 3 second clip on youtube of Scooby Doo saying this?)

7:12PM
Indiana is called for Romney…48 minutes ahead of schedule.  So I’ve missed my first state, though I did call it for the correct candidate.

7:16PM
Turns out CNN was just teasing me and had tossed up some other map.  My perfect record is still alive!

7:18PM
For about two minutes, James Carville argues with Alex Castellanos on CNN while the blonde woman next to them tries to interject.  I’m convinced that after 30 seconds they kept it up just to continue thwarting this woman’s attempt at chiming in as an inside joke.

7:24PM
Crash…actually this time. CNN projects Indiana for Romney and they have yet to say anything about South Carolina. Looks like I won’t be getting 100%.  Candy Crowley has been sent to the Romney camp as a sacrifice for their victory feast, likely as CNN’s plea for forgiveness after she fact-checked Romney during a debate.

7:30PM
Polls close in the critical states of North Carolina and West Virginia. Oh and less important is Ohio.  So far the count is 19-3 Romney, and despite having a state wrong, my electoral guess was only off 2.

P.S. Martin someone is in Cleveland covering a polling station there.  You couldn’t have convinced me to do that for $126 million over 5 years. Boom LeBron joke!

P.P.S West Virginia is immediately called for Romney (as I predicted), pushing the tally to 24-3.  This prompts my dad to say, “I feel like I’m watching a Chiefs game.”

7:35PM
MSNBC calls South Carolina, as evidently NBC did.  Oh and so did Fox.  CNN where you at?

7:41PM
CNN joins the South Carolina club. 33-3. Report in Virginia labels vote counts as “almost exactly similar” to 2008.  I don’t even know what that means.

7:49PM
Good note by CNN contributor – early exit polls have tightly matched previous polls.  Good news for Dems when it comes to the presidency and senate; good news for Repubs when it comes to holding the House.

8:00PM
Polls close all over the place: Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Washington DC

Immediately called: Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.  That’s eight booms for the 8 states immediately called for Obama: Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and DC.  One more boom for Oklahoma’s immediate move into Romney’s column.  Still out are Georgia, Mississippi, and Alabama – all states I predicted to be declared for Romney by 9pm – plus a slew of swing states.

Also of note, Romney is up about 160,000 in the popular vote with 2% turned in (each candidate around 3 million votes).  And the Florida senate race is projected for the Democrat.

8:07PM
Why is CNN so far behind? Trying to build suspense? MSNBC has called the three states predicted to go for Romney I listed above.  Come on CNN make me look good!

8:13PM
CNN calls Georgia (13 minutes too late).

8:23PM
Conspiracy theory #1 on the night: CNN is holding off on calling some states so they can (a) increase suspense (needlessly), and (b) announce them all at once in a big sweeping graphic.  Arkansas closes in 7 minutes.  I think they’re ready to call Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi, and will announce all those with Arkansas.  Is that proof this theory is true?  Of course not.  But I’ll probably still yell about it.

MSNBC has called all those states, and FOX has even called New Jersey for Obama (in addition to those other states). Maybe I picked the wrong network to compare my predictions to.

8:30PM
Only Arkansas closes.  But Tennessee is called along with it at the bottom of the hour.  CNN’s projection is at 73-64.  If CNN would pony up and call Alabama and Mississippi before 9 (and nowhere else) my projection would be spot on.  Not trying to brag too much, but at that point I would have correctly predicted not five, not six, not seven correct states…boom Lebron joke #2!

Side note – Maine splits how they delegate their electoral votes, so there’s still one up in the air based on how a specific county or two turn out.  Which I didn’t account for in my post (oops), but I still got the timing of the state (and color) correct.

8:38PM
Text from Will Roberts: “Fact or fiction? Mittens would have less public support if they knew his real name was Willard?”  I don’t know which part of that text I enjoyed the most.

8:45PM
Flip back to CNN to find out they’ve called Alabama.  Come on Mississippi!!!!!

8:48PM
John King is a wiz at this touch screen.  Andrew Linville seconds this assertion.

8:53PM
Evan Carter arrives. My dad leaves.  If this were an NBA trade, Stephen A Smith would be exhibiting any one of these reactions.

Jokes.

(Not really.)

8:57PM
Evan convinces me to switch to PBS by telling me they may not have funding after the election if Romney wins, and adds that they don’t have any advertisements.  I switch, only to find a commercial.  So I switch back.

9:00PM
After CNN finds it hilarious to not help my cause/ego, a huge number of closings come in across the country: Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, South Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin, Wyoming.

Immediately projected for Romney: Kansas (I really thought it would be closer this time!), Louisiana, Nebraska (3 of the 5, more later), North Dakota, Mississippi (ONE MINUTE TOO LATE), Texas, Wyoming.

For Obama: Michigan (a big one), New York, and New Jersey (aptly delayed).

9:03PM
Reactions: Every exit poll has been good news for Obama so far (including Minnesota and Wisconsin this hour).  None of the Romney pick-ups surprise us, except that North Dakota doesn’t fully close until 11 (so I missed this, but it being strong Romney is a foregone conclusion).  Michigan being called so quickly is really good news for Obama, and is the first state I covered in my previous posts to be called.  If Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico and New Hampshire come in this hour (they should), I’ll be on par still.  I hope.

9:07PM
Wolf Blitzer toys with us like he’s dangling a small child by its legs (not that I’ve ever done this) by saying “We’re about to make a major projection!”  Ok, I’m not sure an exclamation point is indicative of Wolf’s tone, but everyone in this room slides to the edge of their seat.  Two second delay and…CNN projects Republicans to retain control of the House. REALLY WOLF!? IT’S A GOOD THING I CAN’T SWEAR SINCE MY MOM WILL READ THIS BUT THAT IS RIDICULOUS.  I felt like these kids.

9:17PM
CNN shows Florida. Obama is up 217 votes with 78% reporting. Wow.

9:19PM
CNN shows Philadelphia.  Paul (Ream) declares that anyone who has finished high school and lives within a 100-meter radius of someone else votes for Obama.  That’s why he does so well in urban areas.  Scientific.  When pressed, he admitted the radius can be as much as 107 meters.

Side note – Virginia is taking forever to turn in, and longer than Florida, so that’s good news if you took Virginia’s odds.

9:28PM
MSNBC and FOX both move Pennsylvania into Obama’s column which is a big blow to Romney’s campaign with OH, VA, and FL all still too close to call.  And FOX, in a surprise move, has even moved Wisconsin into Obama’s column.  Which begs the question, what is CNN doing? Honestly now I actually think they’re trying to drag it out on purpose.

9:36PM
Spotted: Simba on the wall in a high school in New Hampshire.

9:42PM
Evan eats 8 hot tamales at once and proceeds to spew out 3 nonsense sentences in a row.  Including, “yeah he takes the train metro.”

9:43PM
PBS projects Elizabeth Warren wins the Massachusetts race.  Evan does a big fist pump and falls down.  Just kidding about the second part of that. But I haven’t ruled out a tumble.

9:46PM
CNN (seriously get it together) follows up on the Warren projection, but also projects Donnelly (a Dem) wins over Mourdock in Indiana.

9:52PM
Why won’t they get on the bandwagon and call Missouri, Minnesota, and New Mexico? Besides that the only state I would have incorrectly predicted would be New Hampshire, which can wait if it wants to.

9:55PM
CNN just projected (or I missed it a bit ago) Obama to win Pennsylvania.  Which makes my electoral prediction look better (and makes the Romney camp’s assertion that it, and potentially others, was a battleground state look worse), but comes in about 5 minutes early.  Which is depressing.

9:59PM
Evan calls the Midwest “plain flyover country” and follows that with “no offense.” Oh, of course, none taken. Not about my home or family or job or anything like that.

Paul makes things better, labeling it a “white hole” where things disappear in our country.

10:00PM:
Polls close in – Iowa, Montana, Nevada, and Utah.

CNN immediately calls – Utah for Romney.  Rumors circulate that voters first had to answer a Mormon-related question before their ballot would appear in their voting booths.

10:04PM:
New Hampshire is called for Romney – only FOUR MINUTES TOO LATE to meet my prediction.  CNN is killing me.

10:15PM:
One of my sisters sends me a video of my mom in front of the tv at home.  Paul and Evan and I laughed for a long while.  Took me a bit to get up off of the floor.  It was like this, only without the great soundtrack and way more dramatic.  And not really like that at all.

10:26PM:
The only thing being discussed now is Senate stuff or just more projections about what Florida is going to do.

Iowa’s 3rd congressional race started reporting results – with 62 of 181 precincts reporting Boswell is ahead, which is good news for now!

10:33PM
Bathroom break. No more details necessary.

Also CNN reports that Obama is carrying 87% of the vote in Milwaukee. Wow.

10:48PM
After spending 8 minutes outside tossing a frisbee in the street my hands are nearly too cold to continue typing. On the flip side, tossing under the street-light with the Capitol and Washington Monument in the background is awesome.  Apparently the only thing I missed was a CNN reporter grossly misstating the results from some Ohio county.

10:48PM
Addition – apparently sometime in the last 15 minutes CNN called Missouri for Romney too.  Guess I did miss something.

10:49PM
CNN officially projects Minnesota for Obama and Arizona for Romney.  Mostly sighs of relief for both camps (though as I did detail in my first prediction post, Minnesota was at least on the Romney radar).

10:51PM
In another huge move, MSNBC projects Tim Kaine to win the open senate seat in Virginia.  Prompting Paul to go on a spree of yelling “TK FOR VA” over and over.  And over.

10:51PM
At the same time I get a text message with a picture of a Facebook message chain my mother was having with a friend of mine.  In which she drops an extreme expletive about the election.  I pictured her being this angry. Again, took me a while to get up off the floor, this time because I passed out. (Not actually, maybe I shouldn’t joke about that.)

11:00PM:
Closing: California, Hawaii, Idaho, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington

Incoming: Surprising no one, California, Hawaii, and Washington all fall into Obama’s column.  Romney gets the consolation prize of Idaho and Montana.  228 (Obama) to 176 (Romney).

Notably, Oregon, where Obama is ahead in exit polling, is not called right away.  In a huge bop move, CNN calls Montana at 11, one second later than I needed it to be called to have it in the correct time slot.  But California is just the semi that t-bones the Republican campaign driver.  It looks close, and then the West Coast closes.

11:03PM:
Wisconsin is officially called by CNN, as is North Carolina. Both I predicted in the correct time slot.  Having Wisconsin is huge for Obama (and provides a major sigh of relief to that team), and while losing North Carolina is a blow, it certainly wasn’t unexpected.  In fact, the fact that it took so long is probably good news.

Again, worth noting, polls have been almost spot on so far.

--Revision: Turns out I was actually three minutes late on both of these. Oops. Classic CNN move.

11:04PM:
John King delivers the line of the night: “Don’t ask me about plan F.” Sadly, this isn’t on youtube. Yet.

11:05PM:
CNN officially projects Democrats to win the Senate. I don’t have an appropriate joke or comment here since it would be Mourdock or Akin related…

11:10PM:
CNN gives Iowa to Obama.  This may mean great things for Boswell in the 3rd District, and it means Obama just needs to tack on a couple more states – notably one of Ohio, Virginia, and Florida.

11:11PM:
Make a wish!

Obama carriers New Mexico as well.  249-191.  And then Oregon.

11:13PM:
Hilarious video of someone at the Obama rally in Chicago pumping his arms above his head.  Looks like…this guy combined with these guys.

11:14PM:
MSNBC calls Ohio. So does FOX (despite the commentary).

This prompts Paul to yell, “NINTENDO 64!!!!!!”

11:17PM:
CNN sends Missouri into Romney’s column.  WHY IS IT TAKING THEM SO LONG TO GET ON THE SAME PAGE.

11:18PM:
Apparently the answer was one minute.  CNN projects OHIO to go blue – fitting right into my time category, and right into the time frame in which I predicted we would know. Just sayin’. (PS That means Obama was just pushed over the 270 mark.)

11:21PM:
Switch to the Daily Show to see Jon Stewart say we’re in the same place we started 2 years and 3 billion dollars ago.

11:25PM:
Lots of yelling about where the Republican Party goes from here.  We’re waiting on Alaska, Nevada, Colorado, Virginia, and Florida.  For those keeping track, those last three were the three states I predicted to take the longest.  The last four are all “swing states” I predicted.  Up to this point I’m 46 for 46. (Keep in mind the District counts here, so there are actually 51 to predict.)

11:43PM:
After watching PBS for a bit, we turn back to CNN to hear the Romney camp is disputing Ohio.  But Obama is ahead in Florida, Colorado, and he’s even pulled ahead in Virginia.  Looks tough to see a way back now.

Conspiracy theory #2 on the night: The major networks played it out so that Ohio, after all the talk about that state and the money spent there, would be the state that pushed the president over the top.  They delayed states like Nevada and Colorado and Virginia, and then when it looked like those states may be ready to get in line, they prematurely called Ohio.  Not premature enough that there’s a high likelihood it goes the other way, but there’s still a very small chance, and they just wanted it to look right.

My conspiracy theories aren’t nearly as…scintillating…as others.

11:47PM:
Notably, Obama still trails by 172,000 votes in the national popular vote.  That represents less than 1%, but is interesting to keep track of.

11:49PM:
CNN finally calls Nevada for Obama.  I think Colorado could be called too…but that’s not my job.  At any rate that’s 47 for 47, and the last four states on my list are the last four states to be called.

11:53PM:
Romney pulls back ahead in Ohio, but John King thinks Obama still pulls in more votes in the northern part of the state.

12:00AM:
As we turn the page to Wednesday, conventional wisdom says Obama has won re-election.  FOX has Obama across the 270 as well, and all networks except MSNBC have projected all states but the final 4: Alaska, Colorado, Virginia, and Florida.  These also happen to be the final 4 states I listed.  (Curiously MSNBC has fallen behind in their calls after being ahead of everyone the whole night. It’s like that time Lebron led his team to the finals and then disappeared. BOOM Lebron joke #3!!)

FOX also has Romney up only 220,000 votes or so nationwide.

12:15AM:
Still no concession call, which is ok.  More troubling are the discussions going on via social media.  What can men do against such reckless hate?  Discussions of how this is going to send out country down the drain and lose the value of the constitution?  Does that even make sense? And responses that are just, as I saw more than once, “oooobaaaaammmmaaaaa.”

Intelligent.

12:23AM:
CNN calls Colorado. 48 of 48 (though I said this would be second to last state called, so I hope you didn’t take those odds).  290-201.

12:26AM:
CNN projects that Obama will win the popular vote (he trails right now by 335 more votes).  Mostly due to California actually being counted.

California, by the way, and the West Coast in general, is (again) basically a big Electoral College slap to the face of Republicans.  Seriously I think they need to try and take back Nevada or get Oregon so the clock doesn’t hit 10 and immediately give the Democrats like 100 electoral votes.

12:34AM:
As things slow down, Obama jumps on top in the popular vote.

12:41AM:
CNN projects Virginia goes to Obama.  Lines were evidently so long that people were voting until…nowish…and Obama made a big turnaround in the northern part of the state.  Anyway, I’m 49 for 49, will almost certainly pull Alaska, and then Florida will make me cry by ending up in Obama’s column.  So close.  303-201.

12:45AM:
A “watershed moment for the gay rights movement,” gay marriage looks set to pass in all 4 states in which it was on the ballot, after being on ballots 33 times and failing every single time.

12:50AM:
The phone call has been made.

PS – aren’t you glad I didn’t live tweet/instagram this whole thing?

12:55AM:
Romney walks out on stage.  Congratulates Obama with his first line.  Polite and supportive crowd throughout the entire speech.

1:02AM:
They exit stage right.

I want to emphasize something again. The polls, especially those the last couple of days, were almost all correct.  If you check out the final tallies on this blog (that aggregates all the polls), you’ll see that the averages ended up perfectly predicting the electoral result.  Duly noted. 

*Addition - this morning Slate Magazine recognized my former professor's success as well.

Also, at this same time, Alaska (shock!) is called for Romney.  50 of 50, Florida you’re killing me.

And finally, Romney’s speech was perfect. Candid, honest, emotional, and caring.

1:22AM
After getting up at 5:45am this morning, I’m starting to get tired.  I want to see Obama speak, so if he could do that I would appreciate it. I know Sasha and Malia need to get to bed too, so I think it will just be best for all of us.

1:32AM
In a shot of Obama HQ on CNN I spot Davidson classmate Cas Peters.

1:35AM
The Presidential Obama family walks out on stage.

1:51AM
I will be immediately going to bed when he wraps this up.

1:58AM
The President wraps up his speech with a long, extended climax.  He is probably going to sleep for a long time.  Maybe the longest amount of time he’s slept in years.  The confetti is so thick I’m actually struggling to see the stage from some angles.

All the candidates must be exhausted.  I’m exhausted, and all I had to do was type nonsense for the past few hours.

2:01AM
CNN has yet to call Florida, meaning I’ve correctly predicted it as the last state to be called and the time frame in which it would be called.  And though I’m likely going to be asleep before it is called, it looks like I’ll probably get it wrong.

2:06AM
Great point right after the speech – his becomes the president to get reelected with the highest unemployment rate in the country.  By a big margin.

2:08AM
Ok I’m headed to bed.  I guess I won’t know about Florida until tomorrow…but at this point I just don’t care and want to sleep.

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7:23AM
My alarm goes off and for about .23 seconds I’m upset, but then remember the election. 

8:03AM
See over breakfast that Florida has yet to be called one way or another. There’s still hope for getting 100%.  I need to recount this one as well, but I think I also predicted 34 of the 51 states to be called during the correct time period.

8:47AM
The mood is somber in the office, but we know how hard the Congressman worked and how much he cared, so mostly we just feel for him.  Plus, the conciliatory emails far outweigh the number of degrading ones.

9:55AM
Already fielded three calls from other offers offering their heartfelt condolences.  That makes it sound like someone died.  But importantly, it has been a bipartisan group of callers.

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I’ll probably update this whenever Florida is officially called one way or another.  In the meantime, though, it’s back to work on the ‘fiscal cliff.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Counting Up the Numbers


This is the second of my two prediction posts.  After predicting which way each state will fall in the first post, I will now, mostly for fun, attempt to predict when each state is “called” for one candidate or the other.  A couple of quick notes:

(1)  When certain states are called can serve as massive indicators for how the night will unfold.  If East Coast states like North Carolina and Virginia are called for Romney early, they may give us some cause to believe Romney will make this much closer than some think.  If they drag on, Romney likely hasn’t performed well enough to pull “upsets” in other places.
(2)  On the other hand, keep in mind that each state is separate, and what happens in one state doesn’t affect the vote somewhere else. The time delay (except in Alaska I guess) just isn’t enough to allow voters to “react” to results in other parts of the country.
(3)  This is, as I said, mostly just for fun, done at the suggestion of my roommate.  There’s about a 98% chance that I get this horribly wrong, but on the slim chance that I nail it on the head, we figured it would be interesting to have a point of comparison.
(4)  This exercise is a combination of looking at how close states are, when their polls close, how long they took to be called in 2008, and how long the closest states took to call.  Too bad I didn’t do this in school – actually could have been a great project.

Below is a timeline of the night, based on when polls close in each state.  Please note that the time listed in when the last polling booth in the state closes.  For a state like Florida that covers two time zones, many precincts will close at 7ET, but it is listed under the 8ET group.  Also, it is important to note that when I list a state as being “called” during a certain hour, I mean that state will be called between the current time and the next time listed.  Yes, this is cheating and gives me a bit of leeway.  But it means I think Kentucky, for example, will be called between 7:00 and 7:30pm, not that it will be called right at 7:00.

Finally, states are listed alphabetically in each time category (so it is not, for example, that I think Kentucky will declare before South Carolina – just that they will both declare in the gap between 7:00 and 7:30).  When I list a state as “called,” I adjust the Electoral College tally in the appropriate column.  I know it is a bit jumbled (I didn’t have time to run it through any of my friends with superior Excel skills), but as you track the electoral count, please be sure you’re referencing the middle “States Called” column.  Thankfully (seriously, it was in doubt for a while), my tally came up the same in this post as it did in the last one. 

On to the chart, with an hourly breakdown below! (Highlighted states are states that made an appearance in my previous post, all times are Eastern Standard Time.)

Time (ET)
States Closing
States Called
Obama EC
Romney EC
7:00
Georgia (16)
Kentucky
0
8
Indiana (11)
South Carolina
0
17 (+9)
Kentucky (8)
Vermont
3
17
South Carolina (9)
Vermont (3)
Virginia (13)
7:30
North Carolina (15)
Georgia
3
33 (+16)
Ohio (18)
West Virginia
3
38 (+5)
West Virginia (5)
8:00
Alabama (9)
Connecticut
10 (+7)
38
Connecticut (7)
Delaware
13 (+3)
38
Delaware (3)
Illinois
33 (+20)
38
Florida (29)
Indiana
33
49 (+11)
Illinois (20)
Maine
37 (+4)
49
Maine (4)
Maryland
47 (+10)
49
Maryland (10)
Massachusetts
58 (+11)
49
Massachusetts (11)
Mississippi
58
55 (+6)
Mississippi (6)
Oklahoma
58
62 (+7)
Missouri (10)
Rhode Island
62 (+4)
62
New Hampshire (4)
Tennessee
62
73 (+11)
New Jersey (14)
Washington, DC
65 (+3)
73
Oklahoma (7)
Pennsylvania (20)
Rhode Island (4)
Tennessee (11)
Washington, DC (3)
8:30
Arkansas (6)
Alabama
65
82 (+9)
Arkansas
65
88 (+6)
9:00
Arizona (11)
Kansas
65
94 (+6)
Colorado (9)
Louisiana
65
102 (+8)
Kansas (6)
Michigan
81 (+16)
102
Louisiana (8)
Minnesota
91 (+16)
102
Michigan (16)
Missouri
91
112 (+10)
Minnesota (10)
New Hampshire
95 (+4)
112
Nebraska (5)
New Jersey
109 (+14)
112
New Mexico (5)
Nebraska
109
117 (+5)
New York (29)
New Mexico
114 (+5)
117
South Dakota (3)
New York
143 (+29)
117
Texas (38)
South Dakota
143
120 (+3)
Wisconsin (10)
Texas
143
158 (+34)
Wyoming (3)
Wyoming
143
161 (+3)
10:00
Iowa (6)
Arizona
143
172 (+11)
Montana (3)
Montana
143
175 (+3)
Nevada (6)
Nevada
149 (+6)
175
Utah (6)
North Carolina
149
190 (+15)
Pennsylvania
169 (+20)
190
Utah
169
196 (+6)
Wisconsin
179 (+10)
196
11:00
California (55)
California
234 (+55)
196
Hawaii (4)
Hawaii
238 (+4)
196
Idaho (4)
Idaho
238
200 (+4)
North Dakota (3)
North Dakota
238
203 (+3)
Oregon (7)
Ohio
256 (+18)
203
Washington (12)
Oregon
263 (+7)
203
Washington
275 (+12)
203
12:00
Iowa
281 (+6)
203
1:00am
Alaska (3)
Alaska
281
206 (+3)
Colorado
290 (+9)
203
Virginia
303 (+13)
203
After 2:00
Florida
303
235 (+29)


Hourly breakdown!

7:00-7:30PM
As the first states shut up their polling booths, we can only expect the surest of states to call their winners.  So while 6 states will close, only three will declare their winners, giving Romney an early lead.

7:30-8:00PM
Romney’s lead grows as a couple of the early Southeastern states turn in their tallies as well.  Nothing surprising here.  These are the “free resources” in Settlers.

8:00-8:30PM
The rest of the Eastern seaboard states shut down their polling stations. Some bigger states roll in on the Democratic side of the ballot, but a few more solid Republican states come along as well to help Romney maintain his lead.  Most notable here is Indiana – a state that was quite close in 2008 and ended up going for Obama.  Not seen as a competitive state in this election, Indiana turns in its result about 6 hours early than last year.

8:30-9:00PM
Two more solid, southern, Republican states call their elections, Alabama and the formerly competitive Arkansas.  Romney’s lead grows, and we can expect this to be maintained for a reasonable portion of the night.  If you’re still tracking my Settlers of Catan metaphor, you’ve built another town, a couple roads, and you’re doing just fine in the early stages of the game.

9:00PM-10:00PM
Here’s what we’ll learn in this hour: Were the states that the Romney campaign called competitive at the end of the campaign actually competitive?  It is in this hour that I predict the first few of the states I covered in my last post will be “called” one way or the other.  More specifically, I believe Michigan and Minnesota will be called for the President.  If this is not the case, however (even if they are not called at all), then this will be a major indication that the President is in for a long night and the former Governor certainly has some momentum.

Otherwise, it’s a relatively pedestrian hour.  Despite the turning in of these swing states and New York, Romney racks up more points to maintain his lead.

10:00-11:00PM
I think we’ll know by the end of this hour which candidate is going to win the election.  If a state like Pennsylvania is comfortably in Obama’s column, if North Carolina took this long to call, and if Wisconsin and Nevada both swing into Obama’s column this quickly, then the President should feel comfortable (with the West Coast virtually guaranteeing him the 71 electoral votes of California, Washington, and Hawaii).  If some (or all) of these states remain on the fence, then things are much direr for the Obama campaign, and the election will be much closer (as far as the Electoral College is concerned).

I’ll be clear – I still don’t think Obama is ahead in the electoral count at this point. But if he is hovering within 20 or 30 points and around the 165-180 mark, things are looking ok.  Not perfect, and not like it is a sure thing.  But at least ok.  And if not, then Romney has pulled in a state or two, and made another couple closer than predicted, and could be riding a wave towards 270.

11:00-12:00PM
Most of this depends on when Florida is called.  It’s my personal belief that Florida, in classic Florida fashion, is going to take forever.  Still, I think this is the hour that we see President Obama cross the 270 mark, without Florida.  4 hours after polls close in Ohio I think we see a winner.  (Winning Ohio, or Virginia, is like earning the “Longest Road” or “Largest Army” points.)  Oregon won’t be that close.  Washington, California, and Hawaii can be immediately declared.  This combination pushes Obama over the 270 mark with the combination of Wisconsin and Nevada (random points earned through buy victory cards…too much?) having been declared earlier in the evening. 

And if the President isn’t quite there yet, he’ll be missing Ohio or Oregon because they’re taking a while to count votes.  For Romney to prevent this, he almost has to win Ohio (which is why he’s headed there on election day) or hope for a massive turnout in Nevada (not probable, but possible).  Regardless of how it turns out, Ohio is contested and a recount is called for.  Maybe not. But then again, maybe.

12:00AM-1:00AM
After hours of counting votes just to be sure, Iowa slides into Obama’s column.  Again, if it is really close, and if Romney wins Florida, North Carolina, and, let’s say, Virginia and New Hampshire, then there are calls for recounts in Iowa.

1:00AM-2:00AM
Alaska is called immediately, if not before it closes.  Did you know Bristol Palin’s vote counts as 49% of Alaska’s vote?

Colorado and Virginia both could be nail-biters.  Since I think they both eventually fall for Obama, I likewise think it will take a while for this to come out.  And, again, recounts are on the table.  My money is actually on Virginia coming in first here, then Colorado (mostly due to the time difference).

Trying not to sound like a broken record, but if it is 1 in the morning and Obama hasn’t crossed the 270 mark (at least nominally or in projections), then we are in for hours, probably days, or counts and recounts and arguments and loud exchanges.

2:00AM and beyond
Winning Florida is like gaining the “Longest Road” and “Largest Army” cards all at once.  It was pointed out to me that in my first post I made the claim that you can’t win without ore, and likewise you can’t win without Florida.  Except that I then said Obama would win…without Florida.  Touché.

But take a moment to look at this New YorkTimes graphic.  It includes 9 swing states, and if Obama wins Florida, Romney would have to win literally every single other state on that list.  Which is daunting, to say the least.  Without Florida, Romney seems doomed.  With it, Obama can breathe much, much easier.

But in the end I don’t think that matters.  I expect Florida to go long into the night, and for the election to be decided before it matters.  (I thought about trying to configure my numbers so Florida would decide the whole thing, but couldn’t figure out a way to change anything other than VA and NH.  Plus I didn’t want to give any Democrats heart attacks remember 2000.)

If you’re making bets, I think the odds are 2:1 that Florida is the last state called.  4:1 for Colorado, 5:1 for Virginia, and something like 10,000:1 for South Carolina.  But as Kevinsays, “If someone gives you 10,000 to 1 odds on anything, you take it!”

Final thoughts
Look, it’s going to be close.  Potentially a few thousand (or hundred) votes here, and a few thousand votes there - and after doing a prediction two different ways I still think Obama pulls it out.  

My take is this: either way the other party is going to be hurt and feel like they had this election stolen from them by something or someone: voter ID laws, the hurricane, lies, superpacs, etc.

And if Obama does win, I think it will be interesting to see how the Republicans regroup after failing to unseat a sitting president with such a high unemployment rating.  And, though Democrats are finally somewhat unified in their platform, there are still plenty of issues (mostly generational) within the party that need to be worked out in order for them to govern effectively as well.

Once again feel free to leave your comments!