So what does that map look like? Here's my approximation of that:If Dems are winning GA/TX, they’ve already won. New reality: CO/VA aren’t swing states; they’re solid blue states. IA/OH aren’t swing states; they’re solid red states.— Dave Wasserman (@Redistrict) November 9, 2018
Six states, 101 EVs up for grabs. This is where we start in 2020, and this is where Dems need to be thinking about.
Huge, huge bonus for Dems: four of these six battleground states have Democratic governors now, with a recount underway for Florida for the fifth. That is a powerful tool. If the Democratic candidate wins those four states, that's the ballgame, Florida/Arizona become irrelevant. That's why Scott Walker's loss in Wisconsin and Gretchen Whitmer's huge win in Michigan were both critical this week. And even if Trump wins NC, well, then PA, MI, and WI are enough to give the Dems the win.
Bottom line: Any three of those six states, Dems win, Trump needs at least four and one of them has to be Florida, otherwise he needs all five of the remaining states to win. What happened in 2016 is that Trump got five of those six including Florida, an easy EV win despite a popular vote loss of 3 million, and WI, PA, and MI Trump won by less than 80,000 total.
And as Wasserman mentioned, should Dems get ahead in Georgia or Texas, Trump is done.
Onward. 2020 Elections tag now active. We'll check back in on this post in two years, hopefully.
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