With the exception of SUSA, every recent poll puts the race at 10 points or less. I have a feeling it's going to stay that way, right through the results.npm0925 said:Hardball's Quinnipiac poll put PA at 50% to 44%.
With the exception of SUSA, every recent poll puts the race at 10 points or less. I have a feeling it's going to stay that way, right through the results.npm0925 said:Hardball's Quinnipiac poll put PA at 50% to 44%.
One reason I love APF.terrene said:Jesus people, get off APF's nuts. You people must get really mad at the Colbert report, huh?
APF said:Mumei: I've answered this question a bunch of times here; I assume you mean, when Obama is the Dem nominee, will I vote for him? Yes, but I might just stay home instead. If I lived in a state where my vote really counted, I'd definitely vote for him. Otherwise I see no reason to, since I'm really not a strong supporter of his candidacy.
With the exception of SUSA, every recent poll puts the race at 10 points or less. I have a feeling it's going to stay that way, right through the results.
13%? That'll show him.CoolTrick said:First off, hello lovelies.
Second, Chris Matthews didn't air all of Hillary's comments. (Anti-Clinton bias from MSNBC, what else is new.)
Third, that Oregon poll is great: It reassures what I thought -- Oregon should not be ceded to Obama based on the results of the California and non-bonding Washington primary.
Fourth, that SurveyUSA poll is wonderful, wonderful stuff. I'm now super confident Hillary IS going to win by 12-14%.
CoolTrick said:Pennsylvanoa
I'm not baiting. I'm just playing your game. I'm sorry, is that against the rules?APF said:Well, you've succeeded in making me have absolutely no idea what you're talking about, so yay you I guess... Normally people don't admit, like you are, that they're baiting and trolling people however.
mashoutposse: so only that candidate should have her decisions and history analyzed? I don't see your point here.
CoolTrick said:You're not looking at those numbers the right way.
The only poll that has ever given Obama more than 44% in PA is ARG, and RCP isn't even counting that. THAT poll is a true outlier.
Obama cannot win Pennsylvania with an average of 42% of the vote.
You need to follow his numbers, not hers.
Remember the Golden Rule: Undecideds always break for Hillary.
Even in Wisconsin.
As of now, no poll (except that ARG poll RCP won't count) has shown Obama majorly close the gap in Pennsylvanoa/
Or in either campaign.harSon said:What exactly are you trying to argue? I don't think anyone on this forum, in the media, or nation wide believes Obama is going to take Pennsylvania.
CoolTrick said:You're not looking at those numbers the right way.
The only poll that has ever given Obama more than 44% in PA is ARG, and RCP isn't even counting that. THAT poll is a true outlier.
Obama cannot win Pennsylvania with an average of 42% of the vote.
You need to follow his numbers, not hers.
Remember the Golden Rule: Undecideds always break for Hillary.
Even in Wisconsin.
As of now, no poll (except that ARG poll RCP won't count) has shown Obama majorly close the gap in Pennsylvanoa/
You're right, we're not looking at them in the way that benefits Hillary. Our bad.CoolTrick said:You're not looking at those numbers the right way.
The only poll that has ever given Obama more than 44% in PA is ARG, and RCP isn't even counting that. THAT poll is a true outlier.
Obama cannot win Pennsylvania with an average of 42% of the vote.
You need to follow his numbers, not hers.
Remember the Golden Rule: Undecideds always break for Hillary.
Even in Wisconsin.
As of now, no poll (except that ARG poll RCP won't count) has shown Obama majorly close the gap in Pennsylvanoa/
Mumei said:No, I'm not asking if you'll vote for him when he's the nominee; I'm asking who you'd prefer, all things being equal.
If you would vote for him, would you prefer voting for Hillary, or are you ambivalent towards both?
I am aware you've probably answered these questions before, but I probably missed them.
Are you trying to spin that Hillary winning PA by a margin of 5-10% isn't better then her winning by the 20-25% victory that was predicted two weeks ago?Triumph said:You're right, we're not looking at them in the way that benefits Hillary. Our bad.
Oh well, at least some things never change.
No, I'm responding to CoolTrick, noted maniac and Hillary shrill. Of course Obama closing the gap is a big deal, but according to CoolTrick that's not what's happening! You just have to look at the numbers the right way.Thunder Monkey said:Are you trying to spin that Hillary winning PA by a margin of 5-10% isn't better then her winning by the 20-25% victory that was predicted two weeks ago?
Even while being outspent 3:1?
See but Colbert is funny.terrene said:Jesus people, get off APF's nuts. You people must get really mad at the Colbert report, huh?
APF has his moments.Elfforkusu said:See but Colbert is funny.
OIC; yeah I'd prefer Hillary. Or Edwards, really, if it came down to that.Mumei said:No, I'm not asking if you'll vote for him when he's the nominee; I'm asking who you'd prefer, all things being equal.
If you would vote for him, would you prefer voting for Hillary, or are you ambivalent towards both?
I am aware you've probably answered these questions before, but I probably missed them.
maximum360 said:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/04/09/clinton-camp-its-a-miracl_n_95883.html
Clinton Camp: It's A Miracle We're Not Behind In Pennsylvania
I find the traps he sets to be pretty amusing and usually the kernel of truth that's floating around in there is worth consideration. It has become thread-destroying before when GAF overresponded, and he's pushed too hard before on his end and gotten banned, but I think overall he contributes something pretty awesome to these threads. Being uptight about it does not.Elfforkusu said:See but Colbert is funny.
quadriplegicjon said:.. wow.
I'll answer for him since we seem to have molded into gelatinous polymorphic self.Francois the Great said:how do they get away with this -_-
i have a question for APF:
what do you think hillary's chances of winning the nomination are?
Related note: Slate's Hillary Deathwatch contunues to be amusing.Francois the Great said:what do you think hillary's chances of winning the nomination are?
http://www.slate.com/id/2188627/In case you haven't noticed, the Hillary Deathwatch operates a lot like the health meter in Gears of War. As long as you're not getting shot at, your health goes up. In Hillary's case, nothing too crazy happened in the past 24 hoursa solid performance at the Petraeus hearing, a slight post-Penn morale boost, and a superdelegate regained. Which, in total, bumps Clinton up 0.1 points to a flat 10 percent chance of winning the nomination.
Clinton and Obama showed off their grilling skills at yesterday's Senate hearings with Gen. David Petraeus and Ryan Crocker but didn't offer much more than their usual bleak assessments. Clinton drew contrasts with John McCain, saying she "fundamentally" disagreed with his assessment that troop withdrawals are irresponsiblebut stopped short of her "willing suspension of disbelief" remarks last time. Spoken like a true future majority leader.
You're right, we're not looking at them in the way that benefits Hillary. Our bad.
Oh well, at least some things never change.
But does it even matter anymore? The nomination isn't within her grasps. Even if she somehow won by over 10%.CoolTrick said:The unfortunate part is you're failing to see why you screwed up so badly in Ohio and Texas. Time after time. It's going to screw you in Pennsylvania.
Go to pollster. They have a fantastic short analysis on the recent polls that shows what I'm talking about. If you refuse I'll post it but I'd rather people see it for themselves because they won't like to hear it from me.
CoolTrick said:The unfortunate part is you're failing to see why you screwed up so badly in Ohio and Texas. Time after time. It's going to screw you in Pennsylvania.
Go to pollster. They have a fantastic short analysis on the recent polls that shows what I'm talking about. If you refuse I'll post it but I'd rather people see it for themselves because they won't like to hear it from me.
...CoolTrick said:The unfortunate part is you're failing to see why you screwed up so badly in Ohio and Texas. Time after time. It's going to screw you in Pennsylvania.
Go to pollster. They have a fantastic short analysis on the recent polls that shows what I'm talking about. If you refuse I'll post it but I'd rather people see it for themselves because they won't like to hear it from me.
Thunder Monkey said:...
Obama won Texas.
And here I was willing to believe Hillary when she said four months ago that it was pledge delegates that won the nomination.reilo said:Didn't you know? It's the popular vote that wins you the nomination.
![]()
If McCain can't spell his name properly, how can we expect him to beat the terrorists?
(To his credit, this might explain his problems distinguishing between Iraq and Iran.)
reilo said:Didn't you know? It's the popular vote that wins you the nomination.
PA polls aren't being looked at correctly, and Obama has no chance, but Obama's double digit lead in Oregon means that Clinton has a chance to win the state.
ill ask again because you probably just didn't see it: what do you think hillary's chances of winning the nomination are?
Not how the game is played.CoolTrick said:It might not win the nomination, but it's a damn good electability argument. Especially when Obama's official lead comes from many areas that aren't really conducive to Democrats' chances in November.
CoolTrick said:It might not win the nomination, but it's a damn good electability argument. Especially when Obama's official lead comes from many areas that aren't really conducive to Democrats' chances in November.
That's because there's been no heavy campaigning in Oregon.
How can people honestly go "WELL OBAMA CLOSED A 25 POINT GAP AND STILL LOST BY A NOT TOO BAD AMOUNT HOW IS THAT A CLINTON VICTORY" and in the same breath cite a poll which touts numbers from a non contested state right now? It's like the Indiana polls.
All that Oregon poll shows is how much of an uphill climb the challenger faces the favorite in that state.
If people here think Obama can win Indiana once he starts campaigning, why couldn't she tighten up Oregon? She won the California primary and lost the Washington primary by only a few %.
Not how the game is played.
This message is hidden because CoolTrick is on your ignore list.
CoolTrick said:No, what YOU'RE describing is not how the game is played. If Obama's pledged delegate lead comes from areas the Democrats won't win in November, and Hillary Clinton has won the popular vote, and all the major states, if Superdelegates do decide to weigh that into consideration and by some stretch hand her the nomination, THAT is how the game is played.
Name one state she was behind, rallied, and then won the state.
And she is going to make up 700K in votes... how?
reilo said:And she is going to make up 700K in votes... how?
Name one state she was behind, rallied, and then won the state.
CoolTrick said:And no matter what any of you rabid sheeple say, Superdelegates ARE looking at that Florida popular vote.
Kaeru said:thank god for this, now if people just could stop quoting him too..
Sooo, any new polls?
CoolTrick said:Scary thing is she can knock out around half that in PA if she does well.
And no matter what any of you rabid sheeple say, Superdelegates ARE looking at that Florida popular vote.
CoolTrick said:No, what YOU'RE describing is not how the game is played. If Obama's pledged delegate lead comes from areas the Democrats won't win in November, and Hillary Clinton has won the popular vote, and all the major states, if Superdelegates do decide to weigh that into consideration and by some stretch hand her the nomination, THAT is how the game is played.
schuelma said:Is that why he's been dominating new super announcements since Super Tuesday and continuing after Ohio/Texas? Must not be looking too closely...
CoolTrick said:Neither are you. Clinton has barely been getting any Superdelegates but Obama hasn't been ratching them up at quite the pace that you're implying.
CoolTrick said:Neither are you. Clinton has barely been getting any Superdelegates but Obama hasn't been ratching them up at quite the pace that you're implying.
Hasn't he gained 40 in the span that Hillary has gained 1?CoolTrick said:Neither are you. Clinton has barely been getting any Superdelegates but Obama hasn't been ratching them up at quite the pace that you're implying.
reilo said:I love this!
You are arguing that we should not discount Oregon because neither candidate has campaigned in that state [which is FALSE, both Obama and Hillary were in Oregon in the past two weeks], but then you are completely okay with counting Florida as is, eventhough neither campaigned in it.
Love your logic.
So... just because I live in Kansas, and my state won't go for a Democrat this election makes my choice worthless? Even though my choice happens to be the leader in Pledge Delegates, and popular vote?
I don't see how any Democrat can actually think Cali or New York will go for a Republican.