Statistikhengst
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COLORADO, on the presidential level, was once very much a RED state, but has been a hotly contested battleground since 2004 and polling for 2016 is showing the same kind of "battlegroundy-ness".

That being said, in places where Hillary Clinton is doing exceptionally well in early polling, she is not doing well here. This is one of the really bright spots for the GOP in the early electoral picture, looking at 2016:
First, some background on Colorado (I've been there three times, climbed Long's Peak about half-way in 1990), over a number of helpful links.
All presidential election results since Colorado joined the "Electoral College" in 1880:
http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/compare.php?year=2012&fips=8&f=1&off=0&elect=0&type=state
A electoral "bio" of Colorado, from the end of 2011:
Statistikhengst's ELECTORAL POLITICS - 2013 and beyond: Rank 24 / 28: Colorado
2008 polling from Colorado (will be part of this discussion):
Poll Convergence 12 from 2008
2012 polling from Colorado:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...0U3aFBuT09zQ2xXQ29fTjlJRlE&usp=sharing#gid=11
The three 2016 polls of Colorado from 2013 up to the end of October are here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...NUlSZU52bGdZemNzZ2VNVmVRYnc&usp=sharing#gid=6
Since then, three more polls have come in:
Quinnipiac from 11/20/2013:
Colorado (CO) Poll - November 20, 2013 - Christie Leads Clinton In Colo | Quinnipiac University Connecticut
Christie +1, Ryan +2, Paul +3, Clinton/Cruz tied.
PPP (D) from 12/09/2013:
http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2013/PPP_Release_CO_120913.pdf
Christie +7, Paul +2, Clinton +2 over Cruz and +3 over Bush (Jeb).
Quinnipiac, 2/06/2014:
Colorado (CO) Poll - February 6, 2014 - Despite Christie Woes, Clinton | Quinnipiac University Connecticut
Clinton +1 over Christie and +2 over Cruz, but Paul +3 and Ryan +5 over Clinton.
So, from six polls, what do we see all over the place?
Lean single digit margins, more for GOP candidates than for Hillary.
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Quick analysis:
COLORADO is a 10-for-14 GOP state on the presidential level (since 1960), but it became competitive already in the 2004 re-election of President Bush (43).
President Obama is one of only 3 Democratic Presidents and four DEM presidential candidates to win the state TWICE:
Obama: 2008, 2012
FDR: 1932, 1936 (Willkie took the state in 1940, Dewey retained it for the GOP in 1944).
Wilson: 1912, 1916
-and-
William Jennings Bryan: 1986, 1900 and 1908.
COLORADO has now been a single-digit state in every presidential election since 1988:
1988: Bush (41) +7.78% (this state almost perfectly matched his +7.73% national average in that year and was therefore the bellwether of the nation that year)
1992: Clinton +4.26%
1996: Dole +1.37%
2000: Bush (43) +8.36%
2004: Bush (43) +4.67%
2008: Obama +8.95%
2008: Obama +5.36%
Obama's +8.95% 2008 winning margin in Colorado is the largest for any candidate since Reagan swamped the state in 1984 with +28.32%.
Notice any similarity between Bush (43) and Obama?
Both won Colorado by a LESSER margin in their respective re-elections than in their respective first elections. The last time this happened with a sitting president was with Ike in 1956. In the other three close elections of since 1960 (1960, 1968, 1976), Colorado was not even a competitive state. It is now.
What is it's importance in the electoral college?
Well, look at 2012. Had Romney taken away Florida, Virginia and Ohio away from Obama, Obama would still have won, 272-265 in the EC. In fact, it was after Colorado was called for President Obama that the Romney team gave up and decided to concede, because reporters like John King of CNN made exactly that point. Colorado was called for President Obama at 12:20 am.
Since 1992, Colorado has been called relatively late. The earliest call was 11:13 PM EDT in 2000 (2 hours 13 minutes after the polls closed), on CNN:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...emExbW96SW1tZlNMdktyMmYweEE&usp=sharing#gid=1
So, in a game of strategema, with 9 electoral votes, Colorado becomes a more important player in deciding who gets to 270.
Which makes the polling out of Colorado, all of it, including the early polling, important to watch.
FACIT: at the moment, it is advantage GOP in Colorado.
I also did an EXTENSIVE analysis of COLORADO following the 2008 presidential election, in three parts, which you can read starting here:
Statistikhengst's ELECTORAL POLITICS - 2013 and beyond: The 9.25 pick-up states from 2008 - analysis complete!!!
Specifically:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Egr72sNYBInUglXvJ23vI_oy2329Et8nfJDjpz5Jguk/edit?usp=sharing
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And just to remind: here was PPP's (D) and Quinnnipiacs's track record in 2012:
Statistikhengst's ELECTORAL POLITICS - 2013 and beyond: The moment of truth: how did the pollsters do?
PPP (D) was -hands down - the best pollster of 2012 when you compare it's end-polling to the final results.
Quinnipiac also did quite well, but polled less battleground states than PPP in 2012, at least at the end.
Both pollsters are showing that Hillary is currently struggling in Colorado.
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As more Colorado polling comes in, I will add it to this thread.
-Stat
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