Redstate
Why
I Think Obama Is Toast
By Dan McLaughlin
October 26th, 2012
Barack
Obama is toast. This is not
something I say lightly. I generally try to remain cautious about
predictions,
because the prediction business is a humbling one. I have never been
especially
bullish on Mitt Romney, and I spent most of the summer and early fall
arguing
that this was basically a neck-and-neck race that would go down to the
wire.
But in the end, two things stand out:
One,
Mitt Romney has a consistent,
significant lead among independent voters, which increasingly looks
like a
double-digit lead. This is especially clear in national polls, but can
also be
seen in the key swing state polls. It’s been a hard enough number for
the past
few weeks now, even as the last of the debates gets baked into the
polls, that
there’s little chance that Obama can turn it around in the 11 days
remaining in
this race. In fact, Obama has been underwater with independents almost
continuously since the middle of 2009.
Two,
to overcome losing
independents by more than a few points, Obama needs to have a decisive
advantage in Democratic turnout, roughly on the order of – or in some
places
exceeding – the advantage he enjoyed in 2008, when Democrats nationally
had a
7-point advantage (39-32). Yet nearly every indicator we have of
turnout
suggests that, relative to Republicans, the Democrats are behind where
they
were in 2008. Surveys by the two largest professional pollsters,
Rasmussen and
Gallup, actually suggest that Republicans will have a turnout
advantage, which
has happened only once (in the 2002 midterms) in the history of exit
polling
and probably hasn’t happened in a presidential election year since the
1920s.
Read
the rest of the article at Redstate
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