News

The electoral map in the 2016 election. 270 To Win In 2016 Trump also won Iowa and Florida, which had been won by President Barack Obama in the previous two elections.
Washington -- President Obama's postconvention bounce - combined with recent missteps by Republican rival Mitt Romney - has created an electoral map highly favorable to the Democratic president.
Obama’s electoral map is not about brilliant or stupid. Its about how doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result is the definition of stupidity, not insanity.
The Obama electoral map included states that had voted Republican for decades. Some, like Colorado, New Mexico and Virginia, have seen demographic changes that are likely to keep them in the ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is hopping from one must-win stop on the electoral map to the next in the leadup to a final presidential debate that may be his last, best chance to ...
Together, they were emblematic of the Electoral College map Obama and his diverse coalition rewired in 2008 to win the White House.
Visual aids, like the vivid red and blue electoral maps on every news source right now, are supposed to help you understand data more easily, but sometimes looks can be deceiving. If watching the ...
Some predict Clinton will ride into the White House with more than 300 Electoral College votes. Others provide a narrower path, with Clinton receiving a little over 290 votes on her projected path ...
Politics October 7, 2016 The Clinton-Trump Electoral Map Looks Almost Exactly Like the Obama-Romney Map. How Is That Possible? We’ve never seen a presidential candidate like Trump before.
In 11 of the 14 states we’re looking at, Clinton is doing worse than Obama did. It’s Trump who may have an Electoral College advantage. Let’s take that 1.5-point cushion Obama had, for example.
This is how the map would look if Mr. Trump improved on his polling margin by five percentage points in each state. Clinton Trump 285 253 Electoral votes Ohio 18 N.C. 15 Fla. 29 Clinton Trump 285 ...
As Map 2 shows, the Electoral College has been very stable over the past four presidential elections. Remarkably, 40 of 50 states have backed the same party from 2000 to 2012, a whopping 80%.