Redstate
Swingometer:
Gallup Party ID
figures predict solid Romney win
By Neil Stevens
October 26th, 2012
We
always talk about the
independent, swing vote in elections because those tend to be the
persuadables.
But party ID numbers matter as well, because those partisan voters tend
to
split better than 90/10 for their party.
It
is for that reason that Gallup’s
new partisan ID split, one that mimics what Rasmussen has been saying
all
along, predicts nothing less than doom for the Democrats, and a solid,
national
win for Mitt Romney this year.
Ignore
Gallup’s headline. They’ve
buried the lede so far deep, they’ll be fracking in Australia to bring
it to
the surface. Demographically the country hasn’t changed in a few years,
naturally,
but the difference between 2008 and 2012 is in the TEA party. The TEA
party
happened, dictated the 2010 elections, and has now resulted in a large
partisan
ID and registration shift in this country since.
When
Rasmussen Reports noted this,
and showed it in polling, Nate Silver and his followers scoffed. Just
as they
did in [2010] when Rasmussen was first to predict the TEA party driven
Republican wave, they criticized and insulted the firm that was first
to what
turned out to be the facts.
Now
Gallup is in the game, and the
numbers are brutal. In 2008, the Democrats had a 39-29 (D+10) advantage
in hard
party ID, and a 54-42 (D+12) advantage with leaners. In 2012 though,
we’re in
the post-TEA party era. Republicans now show a 36-35 (R+1) hard party
ID
advantage, and a 49-46 (R+3) lead with leaners. This gives us a range
of party
ID swings from 2008, from R+11 to R+15.
That
Gallup is giving us a range is
not new. They did the same in 2010, when the late Generic Ballot polls
offered
two different voter models. First there was the high turnout model, one
that
proved too pessimistic for Republicans, and the low turnout model that
was too
optimistic. The truth was, as they surely intended, somewhere in the
middle.
Read
the rest of the article at Redstate
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