Statistikhengst
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It sure looks that by July 21, blackjack (21) will be achieved: 16 declared Republican candidates, 5 declared Democratic candidates, making for the largest Republican field ever in our history and a sum total of 21 candidates from the two major parties combined. I suppose that VP Biden could increase the DEM field to 6 and by extension, the sum-total to 22, but he is not making even the slightest of moves that indicate that he plans to run, and soon, his window of opportunity is going to fade. So, at least for now, it sure looks like 16 + 5 to me, with stark differences between those two fields of candidates.
On the Republican side, the three major factors are all coming into play: Geography, ideological tilt and $$
Geography:
South:
Rand Paul (KY)
Ted Cruz (TX)
Rick Perry (TX)
Mike Huckabee (AR)
Lindsay Graham (SC)
Jeb Bush (FL)
Marco Rubio (FL)
Bobby Jindal (LA)
Northeast / Acela States:
Chris Christie (NJ)
Rick Santorum (PA)
Donald Trump (NY)
George Pataki (NY)
Midwest:
Ben Carson (MI)
Scott Walker (WI- to announce on July 13th)
John Kasich (OH- to announce on July 21st)
West:
Carly Fiorina
8 of 16 GOP candidates hail from the South - the current ideological center of the GOP.
4 candidates are from the Northeast / Acela region
3 candidates are from the Midwest
1 lone candidate is from the West Coast
Interestingly enough, no GOP candidates from the Breadbasket or Big Sky regions of the country.
IDEOLOGY
This is harder to pin down and a candidate's claim may or may not jive with his actual record, and a couple of candidates are hard to even define, but this appears to be the most Conservative leaning GOP field I have ever seen.
Hardcore Conservative:
Donald Trump
Ted Cruz
Rick Perry
Rick Santorum
Rand Paul - with strong Libertarian leanings
Bobby Jindal
Conservative:
Jeb Bush
Marco Rubio
Scott Walker
Ben Carson
Mike Huckabee
Moderate:
George Pataki
John Kasich
Chris Christie
Lindsay Graham
Impossible to define:
Carly Fiorina
Money:
Jeb Bush is guaranteed to rake in big bucks.
Ted Cruz has already been pulling in big bucks.
Donald Trump is worth 9 billion - he already has the big bucks.
Carly Fiorina has already launched a senatorial campaign and financed it mostly herself. The question is: do people even know that Carly Fiorina is running?
Rand Paul is having difficulty getting financial traction. He is going to need a big "break-away" moment to attract big donors, I suspect.
Regardless of whom you think even has a chance or not, each one of these candidates is at least interesting to learn about.
We have two former declared candidates in the running:
Mike Huckabee (who won a number of primary states in 2008)
Rick Santorum (who won a number of primary states in 2012)
We have somewhat more diversity in the field than in 2012:
-1 black GOP candidate (Ben Carson). There was also a black GOP candidate in 2012 (Herman Cain)
-1 female GOP candidate (Carly Fiorina). There was also a female GOP candidate in 2012 (Michele Bachmann)
-2 Latino GOP candidates (Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz) - this is a new development.
-1 Indian-American candidate (Bobby Jindal) - this is a new development.
The other 9 candidates are White males. All candidates except Lindsay Graham are married and have kids (some even have Grandkids). All of the candidates are Christians to one degree or another.
So, how to stack a field like this up? Hmmmm, difficult.
The opening primary states (IA, NH, SC, NV) lead to a strong possibility that no front-runner will emerge and a big Primary date (FL / OH / MO) is on March 15th, 2016, again with the strong possibility that no front runner will emerge. FL is expected to be the epic shake-down between favorite sons Bush and Rubio. Kasich will likely have the upper hand in the all important battleground state of OH. MO is important because, like OH and FL, it is WTA. Santorum won MO in 2012.
But some things are consistent: some GOP candidates are at between 0-3% in most polling and are definitely 3rd tier candididates:
Carly Fiorina
Rick Perry
Bobby Jindal
George Pataki
Rick Santorum
Lindsay Graham
Chris Christie
Although he will first enter the race on July 13th, Scott Walker is already in the top 4 and has been there for a while:
Jeb Bush
Scott Walker
Marco Rubio
Donald Trump (who has catapulted into the upper tier since his announcement)
Middle tier:
Ben Carson
Rand Paul
Ted Cruz
Mike Huckabee
Undefinable:
John Kasich - only while he has barely been polled, but does well in his home state of Ohio. He may or may not be a one-hit wonder. Wait and see.
Late in 1991, Democrat Bill Clinton was as about 3% in polling and then after Paul Tsongas won NH, Clinton broke away from the pack. So, any one of those 3rd tier candidates could theoretically also move to the fore.
The establishment bet appears to be on either Bush or Walker, but watch out for Rubio: he is young, dynamic, good looking, a relatively good speaker and he has stamina.
The one factor that I am quite sure of is the ultra-conservative factor: with so many hardcore Conservatives in the race and enough debates to burnish their ultra-Conservative cred, this will invariably lead to Conservatives saying stuff to "outconservativize" the others, stuff that will probably be a poison pill for the GOP come Fall 2016.
In the Democratic field, the candidates all come from the Northeast/Acela/Mid-Atlantic region, and were VP Biden to join the fray, this would not change. Hillary Clinton is still the prohibitive front runner, easily at 60% or considerably more in national nomination polling, with avowed Socialist Bernie Sanders making the race relatively close in New Hampshire at present, but holding at 15% nationally. But what does "relatively" mean? A +14 lead in New Hampshire is a margin that is still a landslide margin and one that Republicans can only dream of getting, with such a crowded field of 16 on their side. The STRONG concensus is that, although it is good to have competition, Hillary is still cruising toward the nomination and will lock up the necessary delegates pretty quickly. Her 60% in most all polling reminds me very much of George H.W. Bush's campaign in the primaries-season 1987-1988.
I am making no bets on the GOP field: anything can happen, including a hung-convention and maybe even a dark-horse candidate. There is also the possibility that with so many ultra-conservative candidates, vying mostly from the South, that they split the ultra-conservative vote and allow either a Bush or a Walker an easier path than the polls are showing. Or a candidate can have a really nasty "gotcha" moment in a debate and therefore change the entire primary calculus.
One other fact is that money is not unlimited and the more expensive a primary season is, the more exhaustied people may be when it comes to the General in the Fall.
Now, I personally have a very strong view of who is going to win in the Fall of 2016, but watching the GOP primary field is indeed going to be fascinating, and probably one for the record books in a number of ways. I suspect that we are going to see some interesting surprises along the way. And the issues of the day are guaranteed to play a major role.
Your thoughts?
How would you parse the R field?
On the Republican side, the three major factors are all coming into play: Geography, ideological tilt and $$
Geography:
South:
Rand Paul (KY)
Ted Cruz (TX)
Rick Perry (TX)
Mike Huckabee (AR)
Lindsay Graham (SC)
Jeb Bush (FL)
Marco Rubio (FL)
Bobby Jindal (LA)
Northeast / Acela States:
Chris Christie (NJ)
Rick Santorum (PA)
Donald Trump (NY)
George Pataki (NY)
Midwest:
Ben Carson (MI)
Scott Walker (WI- to announce on July 13th)
John Kasich (OH- to announce on July 21st)
West:
Carly Fiorina
8 of 16 GOP candidates hail from the South - the current ideological center of the GOP.
4 candidates are from the Northeast / Acela region
3 candidates are from the Midwest
1 lone candidate is from the West Coast
Interestingly enough, no GOP candidates from the Breadbasket or Big Sky regions of the country.
IDEOLOGY
This is harder to pin down and a candidate's claim may or may not jive with his actual record, and a couple of candidates are hard to even define, but this appears to be the most Conservative leaning GOP field I have ever seen.
Hardcore Conservative:
Donald Trump
Ted Cruz
Rick Perry
Rick Santorum
Rand Paul - with strong Libertarian leanings
Bobby Jindal
Conservative:
Jeb Bush
Marco Rubio
Scott Walker
Ben Carson
Mike Huckabee
Moderate:
George Pataki
John Kasich
Chris Christie
Lindsay Graham
Impossible to define:
Carly Fiorina
Money:
Jeb Bush is guaranteed to rake in big bucks.
Ted Cruz has already been pulling in big bucks.
Donald Trump is worth 9 billion - he already has the big bucks.
Carly Fiorina has already launched a senatorial campaign and financed it mostly herself. The question is: do people even know that Carly Fiorina is running?
Rand Paul is having difficulty getting financial traction. He is going to need a big "break-away" moment to attract big donors, I suspect.
Regardless of whom you think even has a chance or not, each one of these candidates is at least interesting to learn about.
We have two former declared candidates in the running:
Mike Huckabee (who won a number of primary states in 2008)
Rick Santorum (who won a number of primary states in 2012)
We have somewhat more diversity in the field than in 2012:
-1 black GOP candidate (Ben Carson). There was also a black GOP candidate in 2012 (Herman Cain)
-1 female GOP candidate (Carly Fiorina). There was also a female GOP candidate in 2012 (Michele Bachmann)
-2 Latino GOP candidates (Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz) - this is a new development.
-1 Indian-American candidate (Bobby Jindal) - this is a new development.
The other 9 candidates are White males. All candidates except Lindsay Graham are married and have kids (some even have Grandkids). All of the candidates are Christians to one degree or another.
So, how to stack a field like this up? Hmmmm, difficult.
The opening primary states (IA, NH, SC, NV) lead to a strong possibility that no front-runner will emerge and a big Primary date (FL / OH / MO) is on March 15th, 2016, again with the strong possibility that no front runner will emerge. FL is expected to be the epic shake-down between favorite sons Bush and Rubio. Kasich will likely have the upper hand in the all important battleground state of OH. MO is important because, like OH and FL, it is WTA. Santorum won MO in 2012.
But some things are consistent: some GOP candidates are at between 0-3% in most polling and are definitely 3rd tier candididates:
Carly Fiorina
Rick Perry
Bobby Jindal
George Pataki
Rick Santorum
Lindsay Graham
Chris Christie
Although he will first enter the race on July 13th, Scott Walker is already in the top 4 and has been there for a while:
Jeb Bush
Scott Walker
Marco Rubio
Donald Trump (who has catapulted into the upper tier since his announcement)
Middle tier:
Ben Carson
Rand Paul
Ted Cruz
Mike Huckabee
Undefinable:
John Kasich - only while he has barely been polled, but does well in his home state of Ohio. He may or may not be a one-hit wonder. Wait and see.
Late in 1991, Democrat Bill Clinton was as about 3% in polling and then after Paul Tsongas won NH, Clinton broke away from the pack. So, any one of those 3rd tier candidates could theoretically also move to the fore.
The establishment bet appears to be on either Bush or Walker, but watch out for Rubio: he is young, dynamic, good looking, a relatively good speaker and he has stamina.
The one factor that I am quite sure of is the ultra-conservative factor: with so many hardcore Conservatives in the race and enough debates to burnish their ultra-Conservative cred, this will invariably lead to Conservatives saying stuff to "outconservativize" the others, stuff that will probably be a poison pill for the GOP come Fall 2016.
In the Democratic field, the candidates all come from the Northeast/Acela/Mid-Atlantic region, and were VP Biden to join the fray, this would not change. Hillary Clinton is still the prohibitive front runner, easily at 60% or considerably more in national nomination polling, with avowed Socialist Bernie Sanders making the race relatively close in New Hampshire at present, but holding at 15% nationally. But what does "relatively" mean? A +14 lead in New Hampshire is a margin that is still a landslide margin and one that Republicans can only dream of getting, with such a crowded field of 16 on their side. The STRONG concensus is that, although it is good to have competition, Hillary is still cruising toward the nomination and will lock up the necessary delegates pretty quickly. Her 60% in most all polling reminds me very much of George H.W. Bush's campaign in the primaries-season 1987-1988.
I am making no bets on the GOP field: anything can happen, including a hung-convention and maybe even a dark-horse candidate. There is also the possibility that with so many ultra-conservative candidates, vying mostly from the South, that they split the ultra-conservative vote and allow either a Bush or a Walker an easier path than the polls are showing. Or a candidate can have a really nasty "gotcha" moment in a debate and therefore change the entire primary calculus.
One other fact is that money is not unlimited and the more expensive a primary season is, the more exhaustied people may be when it comes to the General in the Fall.
Now, I personally have a very strong view of who is going to win in the Fall of 2016, but watching the GOP primary field is indeed going to be fascinating, and probably one for the record books in a number of ways. I suspect that we are going to see some interesting surprises along the way. And the issues of the day are guaranteed to play a major role.
Your thoughts?
How would you parse the R field?
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