Key Battleground States In The 2008 Presidential Election by Archivex Haiti
Key Battleground States in the 2008 Presidential Election
The 2008 election is on target to be the most harrowing election in recent memory. This will be the first Presidential election since 1928 that has no incumbents in the primary, with the 1952 election counting as a certain exception since Truman's name was indeed on the ballot, but he did not campaign. Harry had run out of "hell" to give anybody.
Additionally, there is massive and passionate anger in the voting ranks. We have the unpopular Iraq war in our laps, a budget surplus has been turned into the largest deficit in history, with what all figures point to as the least popular President stepping down from an eight-year reign - with impeachment cries dogging his heels, no less. The Republicans have lost more friends at this point than they ever have before. At the same time, we have massive dissatisfaction with the Democrat side, where we have had defeats at the hands of lame duck Democrat Presidential candidates and voted in a score of Democrats into the Senate and Congress who have since sat on their hands and done nothing.
So, the entire country is actually one big battleground. All assessments of the political map for 2008 have to take this into account. Being said, here are the states which are seen as the front lines of the Presidential race, and why:
Virginia: A decisive state on the Eastern side, it has recently gone from Republican to Democrat, but may be leaning back. The polls here have McCain ahead of Clinton by a wide margin of 51 to 42, but a tie between Clinton and Giuliani at 45% each.
Ohio: It is the "incumbent battleground", having decided the 2004 Presidential election.
Arkansas: This is where we get Bill and Hillary Clinton from, but also where we get Mike Huckabee. Arkansas is traditionally a Conservative state which votes Democrat most of the time. The votes this time will be split, with either Republican Huckabee, the most recent Governor, or Clinton, the former First Lady, emerging as victor. Polls have shown a slight leaning towards Clinton, but the Republican attention appears to be going towards Giuliani, not Huckabee.
Kentucky: This state is so divided that it can't help but be a battleground. The state went for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996, and for Bush in 2000 and 2004. Polls have shown Clinton leading Giuliani by four percentage points, but leading McCain by just one percentage point.
Colorado: Here we have another Clinton / Giuliani split, but it's a hair-split. 44 to 40 on the polls. The other factors that make it a battleground are the bordering of the Conservative Great Plain states, which tend to push it to the Republican side, and the large number of Hispanics in the state, which tends to pull it to the West Coast side and Democrat.
New Hampshire: It became a "swing state" in the 1990's, after having been solidly Republican before.
Indiana: It was mostly Republican up until 2006, when the state swung heavily to the Democrat side in the Senate race. The aforementioned Senate Democrats have done a great job of being clay pigeons since getting into office, however, so the state could veer back to the other direction. Polls currently show the state voting Democrat over Republican 37 to 32, but the state has not voted for a Democrat President since 1964.
Missouri: This state is the traditional bellweather for the rest of the nation, which is to say that if Missouri thinks it, the rest of the country starts thinking that way, too. Its central location both geographically and politically helps to give the status of a canary in a coal mine. The polls here have been largely in favor of Clinton, and it should be noted that the state just elected its first female Senator, Claire McCaskill, in 2006. McCaskill is ahead in the state's approval ratings, with even a third of Republicans saying they approve of her job so far, so this could give them a favorable impression of female politicians in general.
|
|
More Articles
Site Map
What Kind Of Campaign Can We Expect From The Candidates
What The Presidents Did Before They Entered Politics
Assassinations And Attempted Assassinations Of US Presidents
What Is The Libertarian Party
The Role Of Religion In Presidential Politics
Hillary Has Company Some Women Who Have Run For President Before
Biotechnology And Politics What To Do
The Internet Influence On Elections
The Most Colorful Presidential Nicknames
|
More Articles
The 2008 Election And The Iraq War Ripple
... makes the 2008 election one of the most decisive ever. The voters who come to the polls today won't be the same ones who lightheartedly picked a candidate and shrugged prior to 2001. They come with a purpose. They will clutch their ballots in their hands, not even very sure if they can trust the government ...
Urban Legends Of The Presidency
... suspected that Nancy Reagan developed a superstitious fear of her husband traveling after the attempt at his assassination. Are Presidents members of a secret "Skull and Bones" society? No, but a few of our Presidents and Presidential candidates have been members. Despite the ominous name, "Skull and ...
Past Presidential Election Losers And Where They Are Now
... party, which he once manipulated, and is presumably doing something in the business sector. Whenever a newspaper reporter spots him in public and interviews him, he usually remains on the subject of his business career and refuses to comment on anything else. His sole emergence from political exile was ...
Political Terms To Know For The 2008 Election A K
... "Halliburton", who are making a huge profit from the Iraq war while an ex-executive of their company who's still getting money from them happens to be the out-going Vice-President under the President who declared the Iraq war. Groupuscule - This is a word borrowed from the french to describe the tendency ...
Presidential Campaigning In The Media
... candidates themselves. Remember how it was said in 2004 that the Presidential race was won and lost in the blogs - count that double for this year. Podcasting - This one's iffy. Podcasting is just like running a little TV or radio show out of your garage, so it's great for campaigning, but the problem ...
|