W3vina.COM Free Wordpress Themes Joomla Templates Best Wordpress Themes Premium Wordpress Themes Top Best Wordpress Themes 2012

Home » Politics-2014 » Currently Reading:

4-wk sprint: Reality Check

October 28, 2014 Politics-2014 No Comments

Kuff alludes to the state of the county. Here’s the math behind that:

HD     Votes   DEM Support
==========================
Total 220,082    45.5% 
==========================
126   10,992    29.9% 
127   14,874    26.6% 
128   10,209    27.9% 
129   12,498    32.0% 
130   13,804    21.7% 
131    7,749    80.6% 
132   10,995    33.7% 
133   15,848    25.5% 
134   15,351    40.8% 
135    8,737    35.7% 
137    3,989    52.7% 
138    9,059    33.3% 
139    8,829    74.5% 
140    3,278    73.4% 
141    6,434    82.8% 
142    7,057    76.6% 
143    4,832    69.8% 
144    4,178    53.3% 
145    4,713    59.4% 
146    9,657    75.7% 
147    9,656    78.5% 
148    6,862    59.7% 
149    8,286    49.4% 
150   12,195    26.9% 

Some oddities since I’ve been otherwise occupied from updating:

- Dems did not seem to win on Saturday. Given how awful 2010 was, that may track with that experience. But the one comparison I have from 2012 was that it was the only day that Dems had a clear win on (three others were a draw).

- Saturday is usually the first big day of Early Voting. This time around, Saturday’s total in-person vote failed to top Friday’s. It’s possible that this is one of the signs that the mail ballot program this year took votes out of the In-Person pool of voters.

- Dems did extremely well on Sunday and that made the weekend a small win. Important because the entire second week really has to be a win for Dems to have a good shot on Election Day. But …

- Monday reverted back to form, with Dems getting about 46% of the in-person vote that day.

In short, it doesn’t look great for the county.

The races that appear competitive on here (HD137, HD144, and HD149) all behave in strange ways. In particular, much of the Dem vote in these boxes comes in late. In 2012, Gene Wu (137) got 69% of E-Day vote, Mary Ann Perez (144) got 58% and Hubert Vo (149) got 65%. I’m not terribly concerned about any of them even though they look as if they should be competitive.

Perez’ showing is most impressive to me – she obviously starts off with the most competitively drawn district and has benefited greatly from the mail ballot program run by the party, and plenty of money raised to defend her seat. When we saw her partisan scores during 2012 Early Vote, there wasn’t much positive to see there. She came in better than the numbers suggested, but was still behind on the opening numbers. That she’s showing a lead of any kind at this point is encouraging. In the case of Wu and Vo, the in-person numbers for the second week are much better now that Democrats who can’t vote from 8am to 4:30pm now have a few extra hours after work to go vote.

For the county as a whole, things are starting to solidify. Dems should win E-Day, but just winning isn’t enough. We’re going to need to see an E-Day better than 53% for Dems to win. 2012 is a very different cycle to compare against. But be that as it may, the relevant range to look at from that election was that while Obama won E-Day with only 51.9% and no other statewide did better than 52%, many of the downballot judicial candidates did break that threshold, with several winning around 54% on E-Day. That still creates some possibility for a mixed result in the county. We’ll have a better sense of what the likelihood is for that once Early Vote closes up, though. The final two days are still expected to be the biggest.

Related Posts:

Search This Site:

Categories

Comment on this Article:







Related Articles:

4-wk sprint: Early Voting Counts Begin

October 22, 2014

A quick update on Harris County numbers. The chart below includes two days of in-person Early Voting and the mail ballots through Yesterday. The first two days of in-person voting amounted to National Republicans #&*@^!$ Vote Day, with the daily scores for each day being around 41% Dem. The Mail Ballot lead is propping the […]

4-wk sprint: Early Voting Starts (Plus,Mail Ballot Voters through 10/16)

October 20, 2014

Today is the first day of Early Voting. Starting tomorrow, the metrics get a bit more interesting since we’ll have the Early Voters added to the mix. As for Mail Ballots, here is the lay of the (Harris County) land, so far. I’ve included the count of ballots returned as of the date in each […]

4-wk sprint: How Accurate Are Clarity Scores This Year?

October 15, 2014

A quick update on what the November 4 electorate is looking like so far: there were less than 1,000 new ballots returned in today’s update. Not surprisingly, the Dem support numbers didn’t move much: just a hair downward to 54.3%. And the ongoing point of comparison is that, among this group of voters, Bill White […]

4-wk sprint: What the Mail Ballots Show (… so far)

October 14, 2014

With 25,885 Mail Ballots returned as of Friday, here is a glimpse into what the results look like so far: District – Dem Support ——————- County – 54.65% ——————- HD126 – 29.11% HD127 – 31.40% HD128 – 38.04% HD129 – 38.64% HD130 – 29.66% HD131 – 82.35% HD132 – 34.09% HD133 – 27.66% HD134 – […]

4-wk sprint: Early Celebration for Mail Ballot Requests

October 10, 2014

Kuff and Campos (and Campos again) post some good news about mail ballot applications. Namely, the hubbub is on the fact that applications received so far this year outpace the Mail Ballot votes cast in 2012. Emphasis mine, of course. The effort to catch up to the Hotze/GOP mail ballot program certain ain’t nothing. But […]

Archives

Blogroll (apolitical)

Newsroll (Int'l)