North Carolina House: 77 Republicans; 43 Democrats. Winning formula: Maps + Money = Majority Wednesday, November 7, 2012 Vol. V, No. 41 3:13 pm NC House Races: Forecast vs Results In the new 120-member state House, Republicans will have 77 seats to 43 for Democrats. The John Davis Political Report Forecast was 73 Republicans,
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North Carolina House: 77 Republicans; 43 Democrats. Winning formula: Maps + Money = Majority
Wednesday, November 7, 2012 Vol. V, No. 41 3:13 pm
NC House Races: Forecast vs Results
In the new 120-member state House, Republicans will have 77 seats to 43 for Democrats. The John Davis Political Report Forecast was 73 Republicans, 47 Democrats.
- Republicans started with 25 candidates with no opposition
- Republicans won 44 of the 44 races in which they were projected as “Likely Winners”
- Republicans won 3 of the 4 races in which they were projected as “Favored”
- Republicans won 4 of the 8 races in which the Democrat was “Favored”
- Republicans won 1 of the 18 races in which the Democrat was the “Likely Winner”
Democrats started with 21 candidates with no opposition
- Democrats won 17 of the 18 races in which they were projected as “Likely Winners”
- Democrats won 4 of the 8 races in which they were projected as “Favored”
- Democrats won 1 of the 4 races in which the Republican was “Favored”
Click here to see all 120 House races with winners v/s forecasts.
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Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
North Carolina Senate: 33 Republicans; 17 Democrats. Winning formula: Maps + Money = Majority Congratulations to all of the winners! And, to those of you who did not win, please know that everyone who has chosen politics as their life’s passion has been in your shoes. Democrats. Republicans. Libertarians. Unaffiliated Independents. Everyone. We know
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North Carolina Senate: 33 Republicans; 17 Democrats. Winning formula: Maps + Money = Majority
Congratulations to all of the winners! And, to those of you who did not win, please know that everyone who has chosen politics as their life’s passion has been in your shoes.
Democrats. Republicans. Libertarians. Unaffiliated Independents. Everyone.
We know exactly what you are feeling right now. It hurts. Really bad.
Don’t quit. This state needs good people like you.
Wednesday, November 7, 2012 Vol. V, No. 40 11:13 am
UPDATE with RUNOFF RESULTS: December 6, 2012 Vol. V, No. 40 2:13 pm
Maps + Money = Majority
Two years ago, November 2, 2010, North Carolina Republicans won majorities in both chambers of the North Carolina General Assembly for the first time since 1898.
They had exclusive legislative power. Power meant money.
One year ago, on July 27, 2011, legislative district maps, drawn by Republicans for the first time in over a hundred years, were enacted into law by the North Carolina General Assembly.
Republicans lowered themselves to the standards for fairness set by Democrats over the decades and drew themselves a big advantage in the number of legislative districts likely to elect GOP candidates.
Yesterday, November 6, 2012, legislative election results were predictable. Maps + Money = Majority.
Maps mean you have a structural advantage; more friendly districts. Money means you can hire the best political consultants and field organizers and provide your candidates with the resources they need to gain an advantage and win their campaigns.
NC Senate Races: Forecast v/s Results
In the new 50-member state Senate, Republicans will have 33 seats to 17 for Democrats. The John Davis Political Report Forecast was 31 Republicans, 18 Democrats and 1 toss-up race.
- Republicans started with 11 candidates with no opposition
- Republicans won 17 of the 18 races in which they were projected as “Likely Winners”
- Republicans won the 2 races in which they were projected as “Favored”
- Republicans won the 2 races in which the Democrat was projected as “Favored”
- Republicans won the only “Toss up” race
- Democrats started with 7 candidates with no opposition
- Democrats won all 9 of the races in which they were projected as “Likely Winners”
- Democrats won 0 of the 2 races in which they were projected as “Favored.”
Click here to see the UPDATED list of all 50 Senate races with winners v/s forecasts. (The new North Carolina House is now 77 Republicans and 43 Democrats. Details will follow.)
Congratulations to all of the winners!
And to those of you who did not win, please know that everyone who has chosen politics as their life’s passion has been in your shoes. Democrats. Republicans. Libertarians. Unaffiliated Independents. Everyone.
We all know exactly what you are feeling right now. It hurts. Really bad.
Don’t quit. This state needs good people like you.
– END –
Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
Early Voting Stats Shows 5.3% Shift to GOP in North Carolina; National Trend Favors Romney According to POLITICO’s Lois Romano in her 11/2/12 story titled, Obama early vote edge tenuous, Obama no longer has the early voting advantage that he enjoyed in 2008. As for North Carolina in 2012, Democrats are down 3.85% in early
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Early Voting Stats Shows 5.3% Shift to GOP in North Carolina; National Trend Favors Romney
According to POLITICO’s Lois Romano in her 11/2/12 story titled, Obama early vote edge tenuous, Obama no longer has the early voting advantage that he enjoyed in 2008.
As for North Carolina in 2012, Democrats are down 3.85% in early voting turnout compared to 2008, and Republicans are up 1.46%. That’s a net GOP gain of 5.28%. John Davis Political Report, 11/5/2012
Monday, November 5, 2012 Vol. V, No. 39 1:13 pm
If Mitt Romney has neutralized President Obama’s 2008 early voting advantage, he will win.
Obama’s strategic advantage has always been the ground game: voter registration and turnout. That was how he won in 2008. A ground game requires tens of thousands of enthusiastic volunteers. In 2008, Obama had them and the GOP didn’t. In 2012, the GOP has seized the enthusiastic volunteers advantage, thereby neutralizing the early voting turnout advantage.
According to POLITICO’s Lois Romano in her 11/2/12 story titled, Obama early vote edge tenuous, it was anticipated that Obama would not achieve his 2008 early voting advantage.
Romano cited a Pew Research Center report that says neither Obama nor Romney “has a clear advantage among early voters. This is in sharp contrast to early voting at this point four years ago, which favored Obama by a wide margin.”
Further evidence of the shifting early voting fortunes favoring Romney can be found in a study by George Mason University of requested mail ballots in key swing states. Example:
In Florida, 406,634 registered Democrats have not returned their mail ballots compared to 362,920 Republicans. In comparison, registered Democrats have returned 700,970 mail ballots compared to 781,043 Republicans.
As to overall early voting turnout, according to the United States Elections Project, maintained by George Mason University, a total of 31,660,358 Americans voted early in 2012, down from the 40,592,111 who voted early in 2008 (30.6% of 132,653,958 voted early in 2008).
Although North Carolina has about 120,000 more early voters than in 2008, the percent of the total vote is less (41.8% in 2008; 41.3% in 2012) due to overall registration growing from 6.3 million voters to 6.6 million during the past 4 year.
North Carolina Early Voting Shifts 5.3% in Favor of Republicans
As for North Carolina in 2012, a loss of 3.85% among Democratic early voting turnout compared to 2008, and a gain of 1.46% for Republicans compared to 2008, has yielded a net GOP gain of 5.28%.
2008 Early Voting Turnout – North Carolina Total: 2,618,419 of 6,264,733 (41.8%)
- Democrats 51.52%
- Republicans 30.01%
- Unaffiliateds 18.4%
- Libertarians
2012 Early Voting Turnout – North Carolina Total: 2,738,947 of 6,631,904 (41.3%)
- Democrats 47.67%
- Republicans 31.44
- Unaffiliateds 20.66%
- Libertarians 0.22%
In addition to the North Carolina State Board of Elections, a great website for seeing early voting stats is www.carolinatransparency.com/votetracker/, which is maintained by the Civitas Institute.
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Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
The Great Chapel Hill Obama Bumper Sticker Hunt; If he has lost Chapel Hill, he has lost the race. “Four years ago it was cool to be for Obama. Today, it’s cool to be independent.” Student in Hodding Carter’s Public Policy 70 Seminar at UNC-Chapel Hill Monday, October 29, 2012 Vol. V, No. 37
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The Great Chapel Hill Obama Bumper Sticker Hunt; If he has lost Chapel Hill, he has lost the race.
“Four years ago it was cool to be for Obama. Today, it’s cool to be independent.”
Student in Hodding Carter’s Public Policy 70 Seminar at UNC-Chapel Hill
Monday, October 29, 2012 Vol. V, No. 37 10:13 am
Last Thursday, October 25, I had the high honor and distinct pleasure of speaking to Hodding Carter’s Public Policy 70 seminar at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
A high honor. Hodding Carter was U.S. State Department spokesman during the Iran Hostage Crisis from November 1979 to January 1981; one of the most recognized faces in America during the ordeal. He briefed the nation nightly on network news broadcasts.
A distinct pleasure. I was surrounded by 24 very intelligent, uninhibited, diverse, inquisitive and suspicious leaders of tomorrow. Suspicious because I am from another time. They share the here and now together; staring out with great concern at the pieces being left behind by my generation. Justifiably uncertain. Of our value to them.
I was early. Hodding Carter said to meet him at 1:50 in front of Graham Memorial Hall next to Morehead Planetarium. It was 1 o’clock. I was at the light at South and Country Club Road.
I decided to ride around campus and look at all of the political activity. After all, it was a presidential election year. If 2012 was anything like 2008 in Chapel Hill, there would be Obama posters in dorm windows, signs of Obama enthusiasm everywhere; students wearing Obama tee shirts, bumper stickers on every car. Hope. Change.
I turned right on Country Club Road. The Department of Dramatic Art. Battle Park. The Forest Theatre. Cameron Avenue. Hummmmmmmmmmm. No sign of political life.
On past the Old Well; student crossings. No Obama tee shirts. Through the intersection at South Columbia Street. Left at The Carolina Inn onto Pittsboro Street. No bumper stickers.
I continued straight at the light to Manning Drive; the hospital complex. Students coming up the hill. No sign of political life.
In 2008, my twin sons were university seniors; one at North Carolina State University in Raleigh and one at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Both campuses were hotbeds of Obama enthusiasm. Over 5,000 students at NC State in Reynolds Coliseum to hear Michele Obama; 18,000 in the Dean Dome at Chapel Hill to hear Barack Obama.
I spent a lot of time on both campuses that year, witnessing first hand the excitement among young voters for Barack Obama. There were signs everywhere; folding tables and chairs around campus and on Franklin and Hillsborough Streets as young volunteers urged their fellow students to register and vote early. For Obama.
I turned right into Hinton James Dormitory. It was my son’s freshman dorm. I wanted to count the Obama signs in the windows. Hundreds of windows. Hummmmmm. Not one Obama sign.
I glanced around the parking lot. No Obama bumper stickers. Curious. Very curious.
Back out onto Manning and right into the parking lot at Koury and Ehringhaus. Hundreds of cars. No Obama signs in windows. No Obama bumper stickers. Not one.
Right on Ridge Road and left on Stadium Drive. Parker. Teague. Kenan Stadium. No signs. No tee shirts. No bumper stickers. No sign of political life.
Right on to South Road. UNC Student Stores; Student Union. Student crossings. Nothing.
I began to feel like the Greek philosopher Diogenes with his lamp in search of one honest man. Surely there was one Obama bumper sticker in Chapel Hill. One tee shirt. One sign.
Left onto Raleigh Street. Winston. Conner. Alexander. Lewis. Everett. Stacy. Graham. Aycock. Past the Coker Arboretum. McIver. Kenan. Alderman. Spencer. No signs. No tee shirts.
Left onto East Franklin Street. Surely in downtown Chapel Hill, the fulcrum of liberal activism in North Carolina, there will be plenty of Obama signs and tee shirts and bumper stickers.
I parked in the parking lot at the planetarium, right next to Graham Memorial Hall where I was to meet Hodding Carter at 1:50. It was only 1:20. I had plenty of time to count the Obama bumper stickers in downtown Chapel Hill.
I walked towards downtown across the street from McAlister’s Deli and the Post Office, careful to look back at the bumpers of cars parked in the other direction. Nope.
Then I spotted one of those message boards where everyone posts flyers about upcoming concerts and study abroad programs. Hummmmmm. I see Delta Rae is playing at the Carolina Theatre on Friday, November 16. Justin Townes Earle and Tift Merritt are at Cat’s Cradle on Thursday, November 15. Not one Obama poster.
Newspaper racks. Bus stops. Trash cans. Parking meters. No Obama signs. Students coming and going. No tee shirts. Cars in every metered spot. No bumper stickers.
Hummmmmmmmmmmm.
I crossed Franklin Street at Spanky’s and walked back towards Graham. A street preacher handed me a “Are you right with the Lord” tract. Cold Stone Creamery. Varsity Theater. Trees. Benches. Bikes. Julian’s. No Obama signs.
Chapel Hill was a political ghost town.
Another message board. Swing Dance lessons Wednesdays in November at the ArtsCenter in Carrboro. Study Abroad Scholarships at www.goabroad.com. Eat at Flaming Amy’s Burrito Barn in Wilmington. Not one Obama sign.
I crossed Franklin Street near Graham Memorial Hall. There among the giant oaks stood Silent Sam, the statue of a Confederate soldier erected in 1913 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. I waited there for Hodding Carter, a great American journalist and Civil Rights pioneer; pondering the waning political fortunes of America’s first African-American president.
Just four years earlier, Barack Obama had inspired thousands of young people on more than 100 college campuses across North Carolina to do the hard work of winning campaigns. They registered and turned voters out in record numbers.
Exit polling in North Carolina showed that voters between 18 and 29 chose Obama over John McCain by a whopping 74%-26% margin. Obama carried the state by only 14,177 votes out of 4.3 million cast. Without enthusiastic young people, this state’s 15 electoral votes would have gone to McCain. But, where are the signs in the dorm windows today? The bumper stickers?
My NC State and UNC-Chapel Hill twin sons went to President Obama’s inauguration. Drove all night and stood in the freezing cold for hours from sunup to noon just to witness the historic occasion. I was so proud of them. Proud about how far we have come since my Great Grandfather, John Davis, fought along side Silent Sam.
At precisely 1:50, Hodding Carter came walking up the sidewalk. We chatted a minute about our children and friends we have in common in Mississippi. He told me about his class. He said that it was the most interesting group he had taught in six years.
Soon I was surrounded by 24 very intelligent, uninhibited, diverse, inquisitive and suspicious leaders of tomorrow. Suspicious because I am from another time. They share the here and now together; staring out with great concern at the pieces being left behind by my generation. Justifiably uncertain. Of our value to them.
Unlike my generation, there is not a racist sentiment in any of these students. Diversity is not a goal for them. That’s old school. Diversity is today’s social norm. Today’s generation does not merely tolerate differences, they celebrate differences.
If President Obama loses his race for a second term, it will be because he disappointed his base on matters of the economy. Jobs. Unemployment. Debt. Disappointed his base.
I suspect that most of Hodding Carter’s students will vote for President Obama. I also suspect that they are not volunteering their time to turn out voters in record numbers this year; that they do not have Obama posters on their dorm walls.
I asked the class why there were no signs of life for Obama on campus. One student replied, “Four years ago it was cool to be for Obama. Today, it’s cool to be independent.”
For whatever reasons, the enthusiasm that I saw four years ago on the campuses of North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for Barack Obama is gone. The campuses look like political ghost towns.
I never found one Obama bumper sticker last Thursday in Chapel Hill.
If President Obama has lost the enthusiastic support of Chapel Hill, he has lost the race.
– END –
Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
Mitt Romney will be the Next U.S. President Site: Grove Park Inn, Asheville; October 4, 2012. Event: North Carolina Forestry Association Annual Meeting. Scene: Audience member asks, “John, you said this morning that Romney would be the next President. Have you changed your opinion recently? If so, when and why?” Answer: “Yes, I changed
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Mitt Romney will be the Next U.S. President
Site: Grove Park Inn, Asheville; October 4, 2012.
Event: North Carolina Forestry Association Annual Meeting.
Scene: Audience member asks, “John, you said this morning that Romney would be the next President. Have you changed your opinion recently? If so, when and why?”
Answer: “Yes, I changed my opinion last night after the presidential debate in Denver … because of two words: unity and enthusiasm. Up until then, Republicans were not united or enthusiastic about Romney. Today they are.”
Friday, October 26, 2012 Vol. V, No. 36 1:13 pm
Dedicated to the memory of Bob Slocum, Jr., Executive Vice President of the North Carolina Forestry Association, who died October 16, 2012
On Tuesday, November 6, 2012, Mitt Romney will be elected President of the United States.
Two powerful forces at play argue for a Romney win. One, Republicans are united and enthusiastic about Romney. For Romney not just against Obama. Two, President Obama’s 2008 base of support is not united and not enthusiastic. Disappointed.
The turning point was the first presidential debate in Denver. Romney won by a record 72% according to Gallup’s national survey of debate watchers. Only 20% thought Obama won.
- Romney’s 52-point win is the largest presidential debate win Gallup has ever measured
- In 2008, Gallup showed Obama as the winner in all three debates over John McCain
On October 3, 2012, Mitt Romney accomplished something every conservative in American would have loved to have done: he defeated President Barack Obama, a liberal, in an ideological argument about the economy in front of 67 million people. Enthusiasm kindled. Unity fused.
Reluctant Republicans joined with Romney stalwarts. Religious right Republicans. Tea Party Republicans. Libertarian Republicans. Business moderate Republicans. United. Excited.
The results were apparent right away. According to the Washington Post-ABC News Poll conducted October 10-13, the number of Romney voters “Very enthusiastic” about supporting him is 62%, up from 48% in late September and 26% in late May. In other words, enthusiasm for Romney among his supporters has grown by 161% since the May survey.
An even more significant number in the poll in measuring Romney’s potential: only 31% of John McCain’s supporters were “very enthusiastic” about him in October of 2008; Romney 62%.
For emphasis: After the first debate, Mitt Romney’s “very enthusiastic” support percent doubled that of John McCain’s at the same time four years ago.
- 31% of John McCain’s supporters were “very enthusiastic” about him in October 2008
- 62% of Mitt Romney’s supporters are “very enthusiastic” about him in October 2012
First Signs of Disenchantment with Obama came in Fall 2009
Disenchantment in the Obama camp was evident within months of his inauguration in 2009. According to Gallup, President Obama’s job approval after his first week in office was 69%. By that fall, his job approval had plummeted to 50%. Year-end, 48%.
Two states had governors races in the fall of 2009. Despite personal visits and impassioned appeals by Obama, Republicans won in Virginia and New Jersey. Low turnout among African-Americans. Low turnout among young people. Shifting loyalties of independent voters.
According to exit polling:
- Only 8% of the 18-to-24-year-old voters turned out in New Jersey (17% in 2008)
- Only 10% of the 18-to-24-year-olds turned out in Virginia (21% in 2008).
Virginia gubernatorial winner Bob McDonnell received 62% of the independent votes, with Democrat Creigh Deeds capturing only 37%. In New Jersey, GOP gubernatorial winner Chris Christie received 58% of the independent votes, with Democrat Corzine capturing only 31%.
Then came the special election for U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy’s seat in Massachusetts in January 2010. Victory denied. Obama’s influence again ignored. That fall, American voters flipped 65 U.S. House seats from Democrat to Republican. Largest gain by either party since 1948.
Where were the enthusiastic Obama volunteers from 2008? Vanished in the fog of uncertainty that accompanies unemployment and underemployment.
On October 8, a new POLITICO/George Washington University Battleground Tracking Poll concluded: “The percentages among key Democratic constituencies who say they are extremely likely to vote should cause concern in Chicago: While 82 percent of whites (who break for Romney by a 15-point margin) say they’re “extremely likely” to vote, only 71 percent of African-Americans and 70 percent of Latinos do. And just 68 percent of 18-to-29-year-olds, another key Obama constituency, put themselves in the “extremely likely” to vote category.” Disappointed.
I did not see the enthusiasm and unity for Romney coming
Throughout this election cycle, I have hesitated to call the race for Romney because of two critical factors: Republican unity and Republican enthusiasm. They were in doubt. Despite growing signs of a disenchanted Obama base, there were still simply too many Republicans who doubted Romney’s conservative bona fides.
Then came Wednesday, October 3, 2012; University of Denver. Mitt Romney accomplished something every conservative in America would have loved to have done: he defeated President Barack Obama, a liberal, in an ideological argument about the economy in front of 67 million people. Enthusiasm kindled. Unity fused.
I watched the debate in my room at the Grove Park Inn, the same hotel where President Obama stayed in 2008 when he prepared for his first debate against John McCain. I was there for a speech to the Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Forestry Association. The speech was written; the PowerPoint presentation was prepared saying Obama would win a second term.
Then came Mitt Romney’s 52-point win in the first presidential debate. Largest presidential debate win Gallup has ever measured. The same Barack Obama who had won all three debates against John McCain in 2008 just lost. Lost big.
I turned my laptop on and opened my PowerPoint presentation. For the first time in this election cycle I typed, “Romney likely winner of U.S. Presidential race.” I had always said that he would carry North Carolina. Now, I believed he would take it all.
After my speech to the Forestry Association the next morning, during the Q&A, a member of the audience asked, “John, you said this morning that Romney would be the next President. Have you changed your opinion recently? If so, when and why?”
I replied, “Yes, I changed my opinion last night after the presidential debate in Denver … because of two words: unity and enthusiasm. Up until then, Republicans were not united or enthusiastic about Romney. Today they are.”
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Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
It’s All Over for Obama in North Carolina as Romney Surges Ahead. Republicans on track to dominate Executive, Legislative and Judicial Branches Question from CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Monday, October 22, to Paul Begala, senior Democratic political consultant to pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA Action: “Has he [Obama] given up on North Carolina?” Paul Begala: “Yes.”
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It’s All Over for Obama in North Carolina as Romney Surges Ahead. Republicans on track to dominate Executive, Legislative and Judicial Branches
Question from CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Monday, October 22, to Paul Begala, senior Democratic political consultant to pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA Action: “Has he [Obama] given up on North Carolina?” Paul Begala: “Yes.”
Tuesday, October 23, 2012 Vol. V, No. 35 11:13 am
Paul Begala, senior Democratic political consultant to pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA Action, the same Paul Begala who was Chief Strategist for 1992 Clinton-Gore campaign, dropped a political bombshell yesterday when he told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that President Obama was giving up on North Carolina.
“Paul, one quick question to you,” said Wolf Blitzer during a live CNN interview, “Has he given up on North Carolina?” Begala replied, “Yes.” Watch the interview here.
Now comes the news that Begala is walking back his comment about Obama giving up on North Carolina. Walk back all you want Paul, Obama cannot carry North Carolina in 2012.
All hopes for a political comeback for North Carolina Democrats this year were already in doubt. No power. No money. No momentum. No maps. Lost it all in 2010 thanks to President Obama.
Today, Real Clear Politics has Mitt Romney leading President Obama in North Carolina by 50% to 45%. Romney has led in all North Carolina polls conducted in October. It’s all over.
This morning’s news that North Carolina is among the states for a final Obama TV ad blitz is panning for fool’s gold. You can’t win here with a weak, leaderless, underfunded, unenthusiastic state Democratic Party, especially against a united, well-led, well-funded and enthusiastic Republican Party.
North Carolina Democrats have no political warfare generals; Perdue “the worst job approval of any Governor in the country” according to Public Policy Polling, a Democratic poll firm. Eleven (11) vetoes overridden by the first GOP General Assembly since 1898. A lame duck.
All of the political advantages enjoyed by North Carolina Democrats in 2008 have by seized by North Carolina Republicans, especially money, unity and enthusiasm among volunteers.
Money flows to those with power. Democrats no longer have power. No power, no money. No money, no resources to do political battle. That’s the key game-changing structural deficiency for the state Democrats. The other is the loss of enthusiasm for Obama.
Enthusiasm for Obama is Gone; Growing in GOP Ranks
On April 19, 2012, in the John Davis Political Report, Vol. V, No. 14, I wrote, “President Obama cannot win a second term without the army of enthusiastic young campaign volunteers responsible for his first victory, and thus far they are nowhere to be found. They have not abandoned the cause; they have abandoned the leader of the cause.”
Four years ago you could not have walked on any campus in North Carolina without being accosted by an enthusiastic Obama volunteer. Today, they are nowhere to be found. Too many unemployed or working somewhere part time; forced to live with their parents after college.
In 2008, Obama carried the state by only 14,177 votes out of 4.3 million cast despite a dominant state Democratic Party and a year-long commitment of a full compliment of political resources; 47 headquarters staffed by 400 paid field organizers who coordinated the get-out-the-vote work of 10,000 enthusiastic volunteers. Obama never had a chance in 2012 without a strong state Democratic Party … and those 10,000 enthusiastic volunteers.
With Romney surging ahead of Obama in North Carolina, and the state GOP enjoying the advantage of the thousands of enthusiastic volunteers, Republicans are on track to dominate the elections in all three branches of state government, executive, legislative and judicial.
– END –
Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
North Carolina Congressional Forecasts; No Change since Exclusive Scoop July 1, 2011 The GOP will have at least a 9-4 majority following the November 6 General Election. John Davis, Editor, John Davis Political Report Friday, October 12, 2012 Vol. V, No. 33 9:13 am Exclusive Scoop in 2011 On Friday morning, July 1, 2011,
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North Carolina Congressional Forecasts; No Change since Exclusive Scoop July 1, 2011
The GOP will have at least a 9-4 majority following the November 6 General Election.
John Davis, Editor, John Davis Political Report
Friday, October 12, 2012 Vol. V, No. 33 9:13 am
Exclusive Scoop in 2011
On Friday morning, July 1, 2011, subscribers to the John Davis Political Report were the first to see the new congressional districts proposed by the legislative remappers. The headline read, North Carolina’s New Congressional Districts: Say Goodbye to Democrats Miller, Shuler and Kissell; McIntyre Fighting Chance.
A historic Republican advantage was in the making. When the final maps were enacted into law on July 28, 2011, only 3 districts of 13 were safe for Democrats. By the time the filing deadline rolled around on February 29, 2012, Congressmen Brad Miller (Wake County) and Heath Shuler (Haywood) conceded to the Republican advantages in their districts and announced that they would not seek reelection.
Two Democratic Congressmen, Mike McIntyre (Robeson) and Larry Kissell (Montgomery), decided to fight against the odds for reelection. As last year’s headline read, McIntyre has a fighting chance. Kissell does not.
Congressman McIntyre is a seasoned campaigner who can count his war chest by the millions of dollars; a classic Eastern North Carolina Blue Dog Democrat who has the endorsement of the National Rifle Association and over 50 Southeastern North Carolina mayors. Former state Senator David Rouzer is a newcomer to big league politics, and may be out-muscled despite the favorable leaning of the district.
Larry Kissell’s chances for reelection are slim-to-none. The most loyal Democratic precincts in Mecklenburg County were carved out of this one-time Swing district held by Republican Robin Hayes (Cabarrus) for five terms. It is now safe territory for GOP challenger Richard Hudson (Cabarrus).
Bottom line: The GOP will have at least a 9-4 majority following the November 6 General Election.
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Premium Annual Subscription is $245. Subscribe online at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe, or mail your check to John Davis Political Report, P.O. Box 30714, Raleigh, NC, 27622. P.S.: Need a speaker? Let me know if you need a speaker or a moderator for a political panel. Audiences are particularly interested in politics this year due to the nation’s economic crisis and the many other uncertainties. Inquire about availability here. JND
Tuesday, July 12, 2011 Vol. IV, No. 14 Updated North Carolina’s New Senate Districts – Updated Phil Berger/Don Vaughan Double-bunked; Pete Brunstetter/Linda Garrou Double-bunked; Total Districts Won by McCain over Obama go from 30 to 34 Under New Maps John Davis Political Report Subscribers First to Receive Comprehensive NC Senate Analysis The
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Tuesday, July 12, 2011 Vol. IV, No. 14 Updated
North Carolina’s New Senate Districts – Updated
Phil Berger/Don Vaughan Double-bunked; Pete Brunstetter/Linda Garrou Double-bunked; Total Districts Won by McCain over Obama go from 30 to 34 Under New Maps
John Davis Political Report Subscribers First to Receive Comprehensive NC Senate Analysis
The July 4th half-price sale on an annual subscription to the John Davis Political Report is being extended for the remainder of July! Now only $245 for a Premium Annual Subscription! Click HERE to Print Subscription Reply Form. Subscribe online here!
Key Political Conclusions
Click here to see the New NC Senate Map Proposed by the NC General Assembly
- UPDATE: 14 of North Carolina’s 100 counties have ½ of the state’s 6.1 million voters. Under the new state Senate maps, half of the 50-member Senate will represent all or part of those 14 counties. The counties are: Mecklenburg, Wake, Guilford, Forsyth, Cumberland, Durham, Buncombe, New Hanover, Gaston, Union, Cabarrus, Pitt, Catawba and Iredell.
- UPDATE: The other half of the 50-member Senate will represent all or part of 86 counties.
- UPDATE: Mecklenburg County has 10% of the 50 Senate districts; Wake another 10%.
- UPDATE: During the past decade, 87 counties had a combined net population growth of 481,376, about the same as Wake and Mecklenburg combined.
- We are witness to the urbanization of political power in North Carolina.
- Under the new Senate districts, the majority party will likely be Republican for the remainder of the decade as there are 34 districts won by US Sen. John McCain in the 2008 presidential race, 29 districts won by State Sen. Robert Pittenger in his 2008 race for lieutenant governor, and 26 districts won by US Sen. Elizabeth Dole in her last race against U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan in 2008.
- The GOP advantage in the number of Senate districts favoring the election of a Republican and the likely first ever Republican fund-raising advantage argue for a long-term Republican Senate majority in North Carolina.
- In 2008, there were 30 Senate districts that gave McCain a 50% or greater win, with 22 districts giving McCain a 55%-or-greater win.
- Under the new maps, there are 34 Senate districts that would have given McCain a 50%-or-greater win, with 27 that would give McCain a 55%-or-greater win.
Surprises & Interesting Notes
- Sen. Phil Berger, a Rockingham County Republican and Senate President Pro Tem, is double-bunked with Sen. Don Vaughan, a Guilford County Democrat. Burger appears to have an advantage as the district would have voted for McCrory (51% to 45% Perdue) and McCain (57% to 43% Obama).
- Sen. Pete Brunstetter, a Forsyth County Republican, is double-bunked with Sen. Linda Garrou, a Forsyth County Democrat. Brunstetter appears to have an advantage as the district would have voted for McCrory (56% to 41% Perdue) and McCain (61% to 39% Obama).
- Sen. Debbie Clary, a Cleveland County Republican, is double-bunked with fellow Republican Sen. Warren Daniel from Burke County. Clary announced last month her intentions to resign. Her replacement will have to face Sen. Daniel.
- Sen. Jerry Tillman, a Randolph County Republican, has been double-bunked with fellow Republican Sen. Harris Blake from Moore County. Randolph County will have the advantage in the Republican primary.
- CORRECTED: Only two Senate Democrats were double-bunked: Sen. Ellie Kinnaird (D-Orange) and Sen. Bob Atwater (D-Chatham) reside in the new Senate District 23, including all of Orange and Chatham counties.
Most Vulnerable Incumbents
- The most vulnerable Democrat senators, not counting those who are double bunked with a Republican, are Sen. Doug Berger from Franklin County, Sen. Bill Purcell from Scotland County, and Sen. Stan White from Dare County (Sen. Basnight’s old seat).
- The most vulnerable Republican senator, not counting those who are double bunked, is Sen. Wesley
- Meredith from Cumberland County (Sen. Tony Rand’s old seat).
- There are 9 majority-minority districts where the minority voting age population is 50% or greater. One district, Senate District 13, combines Robeson County and Columbus County to achieve a minority district that includes American Indian, Hispanic and African-Americans.
Legal Limits Established by GOP Stephenson Decision Limit GOP Gerrymandering
Republicans achieved one of the greatest political coups in North Carolina politics in 2003 by successfully litigating the radically gerrymandered maps drawn by the Democratic legislative majority following the 2000 census.
The Stephenson v. Bartlett decision by the North Carolina Supreme Court established new requirements for legislative redistricting in North Carolina that, ironically, now limit the ability of Republicans to do to Democrats what they have done to Republicans for many decades: radical partisan gerrymandering.
In 2001, North Carolina Senate Democrats drew themselves 28 friendly districts and gave the GOP Senators 16. There were 6 swing Senate districts. Likewise, the North Carolina House Democrats drew themselves 59 friendly districts and gave the GOP 47. There were 14 swing House districts.
Ultimately, after two years of legal filings, hearings and rulings in the Stephenson v. Bartlett case, the courts in 2003 leveled the playing field. Among the 50 Senate districts approved in 2003, 24 favored Democrats, 22 favored Republicans, and 4 were swing districts. Among the 120 House districts approved in 2003, 51 favored Democrats and 55 favored Republicans. There were 14 Swing districts.
This year, the Stephenson case has forced Republicans to comply with the following:
Voting Rights Act districts must be drawn first to ensure compliance with federal law.
- Population deviations must be within plus-or-minus 5% of the ideal district population.
- Creating districts within counties (urban counties) or by combining whole counties is required until it is no longer possible to create a district without using a part of a county.
- Example: Wake County now has 5 senate districts, 4 within the county and one in combination with all of Franklin County. Mecklenburg County has 5 districts, all within the county lines.
Before the Stephenson case, legislative maps in North Carolina looked more like a 1000-piece puzzle. After the Stephenson case, legislative maps in North Carolina look more like a state map of the counties. See the Legislative Guide to Redistricting for all law relating to remapping.
Sophisticated Mapping Technology Allows Long-range Maps
As with the congressional maps released two weeks ago, the changes in the new Senate maps are as politically significant as they are subtle, illustrating the extraordinary sophistication of today’s remapping technology.
Adding to the likelihood that Republicans will keep the Senate majority for the remainder of the decade is the fact that today’s remapping technology allows districts to be drawn with population growth projections.
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“Republicans drew the districts with growth projections in mind to ensure that they will be safe all the way to the end of the decade.” John Davis Political Report Post July 6, 2011 Vol. IV, No. 14 Revised/Updated North Carolina’s New Congressional Districts: Say Goodbye to Democrats Miller, Shuler and Kissell; McIntyre
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“Republicans drew the districts with growth projections in mind to ensure that they will be safe all the way to the end of the decade.” John Davis Political Report
Post July 6, 2011 Vol. IV, No. 14 Revised/Updated
North Carolina’s New Congressional Districts: Say Goodbye to Democrats Miller, Shuler and Kissell; McIntyre has Fighting Chance
John Davis Political Report Subscribers First to Receive Comprehensive Analysis
Last Friday, subscribers to the John Davis Political Report were the first in North Carolina to receive a comprehensive analysis of the new congressional districts proposed by the legislative reapportionment committees. Today, I am sending a Revised/Updated edition of that report. Information presented in bold italics has been added. There are new links with each district analysis that provides hundreds of facts about each of the proposed new districts. Check them out!
The July 4th half-price sale on an annual subscription to the John Davis Political Report is being extended for the remainder of July! Now only $245 for a Premium Annual Subscription! Click HERE to Print Subscription Reply Form. Subscribe online here!
Key Conclusions:
- Under the new congressional districts, the partisan advantage will shift from 7 Democratic and 6 Republican to 8 Republican and only 3 guaranteed Democratic districts, with 2 that will depend on the strengths of the candidates and the prevailing partisan winds of the given election year.
- President Obama carried 8 NC congressional districts and Sen. McCain 5 in 2008. Under the 13 new districts, Obama would only carry 3 (Butterfield, Price and Watt).
- Only 4 of the current districts gave McCain a 55%-or-greater vote in 2008 (Jones, Foxx, Myrick and McHenry). There are now 10 districts that would have voted for McCain for president at 55% or greater (all but Butterfield, Price and Watt). The same 10 districts would give US Sen. Burr a 60%-or-greater victory.
- Gov. Perdue carried 9 of the 13 congressional districts in 2008, all but one greater than 50%. Under the new districts, Perdue would carry 5 (Butterfield, Jones, Price, McIntyre and Watt).
- GOP gubernatorial nominee Pat McCrory only carried 4 congressional districts in 2008 (Foxx, Coble, Myrick and McHenry). If the election were held under the new congressional districts, he would add Elmers, Kissell, Shuler and Miller to his wins.
Key District-by-District Conclusions
- U.S. House District 1, currently held by Democratic Congressman G.K. Butterfield, did not undergo any change that will impact the likely outcome of congressional races for the next 10 years. It is still a majority-minority district where Democrats have a 68% registration advantage over the meager 16% Republican registration. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 2, currently held by Republican Congresswoman Renee Elmers, has become a significantly more Republican-friendly district. This district was held throughout the last decade by Democratic Congressman Bob Etheridge. The new district has 39% Democratic registration and 36% Republican registration, a 3% Democratic advantage. However, under the old map, Democrats enjoyed a 23% advantage with 51% registered Democrats to only 28% registered Republicans. Elmers squeaked out a win in Republican friendly 2010. She will still have to work hard to hold this seat, but the new map gives her an advantage at the starting line.
Key County Changes: Harnett County, home to both Elmers and Etheridge, is now split into three congressional districts (Price, Elmers and Coble), with about half remaining in the new congressional district. Elmers now has all of Sampson County and keeps all of Johnston County, both reliably Republican counties. This district no longer has any of the Franklin County and Nash County precincts, making it a stronger Republican opportunity district. New territory includes precincts in Wake, Cumberland and Wayne. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 3, currently held by Republican Congressman Walter Jones, will likely always elect Jones as long as he runs. Jones and his father have held this district for over four decades. However, this district is now a swing district that could be won by a strong conservative Democrat once Jones retires. Remember, there are lots of eastern North Carolina “Reagan Democrats” in this district. Democratic registration increases considerably under the new maps from 41% to 49%; Republicans lose market share from 35% to 30%. McCain would still beat Obama in this district by about 56% to 44%. However, Perdue would defeat McCrory under the new maps by 55% to 44%, whereas she beat McCrory in this congressional district in 2008 by 49% to 48.4%.
Key County Changes: Onslow County and almost all of Carteret County, both Republican friendly, have been moved from Jones’ district to McIntyre’s district. Major counties: District 3 has all of Duplin, Jones, Dare, Beaufort and Craven Counties, and substantial parts of Pitt, Nash and Lenoir. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 4, currently held by Democratic Congressman David Price, did not undergo any change that will impact the likely outcome of congressional races for the next 10 years. It is still a solid Democratic district where Democrats now have a 35% registration advantage over Republicans (54% Democrats to 19% Republicans, with 27% Unaffiliated).
Key County Changes: Conservative “Reagan Democrats” precincts in northern Orange and northern Durham with a history of voting Republican in federal races have been taken out of Price’s district and moved to Miller’s district. That’s good for Price, a Democrat, and bad for Miller, a Democrat. Precincts in southern Wake County with a history of voting Republican in federal elections have been taken out of Price’s district and put into Republican Renee Elmers’ district, a move that helps both camps. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 5, currently held by Republican Congresswoman Virginia Foxx, has a bit fewer Republicans and more Democrats but Republicans still outnumber the loyal opposition and will continue find this district a safe harbor for GOP candidates.
Key County Changes: Although Foxx loses Surry and Stokes counties to Miller, she keeps some of the most Republican districts in the state. Wilkes, Yadkin and Davie counties are 3 of the only 6 counties that voted for Herbert Hoover in 1932! GOP precincts in Rockingham and Forsyth counties have been taken out and put into Miller’s district. Not good for Miller. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 6, currently held by Republican Congressman Howard Coble, has fewer Republicans and more Democrats but would still choose McCain over Obama by 55% to 44%, whereas under the old configuration McCain defeated Obama by a much wider margin, 63% to 36% (Statewide: Obama 49.7%; McCain 49.4%).
Key County Changes: Coble looses his share of Davidson and Rowan, keeps all of Moore County and much of what he had in Randolph, Guilford and Alamance Counties. He picks up most of Chatham County, almost all of Lee, and portions of Harnett and Cumberland. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 7, currently held by Democratic Congressman Mike McIntyre, has 9% fewer Democrats but still gives McIntyre a fighting chance. Although McCain defeated Obama here under the old map by 5%, McCain would defeat Obama here under the new maps by 55% to 44%. On the other hand, Perdue would still beat Republican gubernatorial candidate McCrory here by 6 points, but not nearly as bad as the 11 point shellacking she gave him here in 2008. McIntyre maintains a fighting chance.
Key County Changes: Onslow County and almost all of Carteret County (94%), both Republican friendly, have been moved from Jones’ district to McIntyre’s district. Major counties: District 7 has all of Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, New Hanover, Onslow and Pender. Democratic-friendly parts of Cumberland, Duplin and Robeson counties have been taken out of this district. McIntyre still has a fighting chance here, but not much more than a fighting chance. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 8, currently held by Democratic Congressman Larry Kissell, has been reconfigured in such a way that Kissell can no longer win. This district was held by GOP Congressman Hayes for most of the decade. It now has more registered Republicans and fewer Democrats and a shifted from a 52% Obama district to a 44% Obama district. Likewise, it has shifted from a 47% McCrory district to a 53% McCrory district. Gov. Perdue carried this district by 51% in one of the best years for voter registration and turnout of Democrats in modern political history. In the absence of the extraordinary advantage that Democrats enjoyed as a result of the historic campaign of President Obama, this now becomes a very difficult district for them to hold.
Key County Changes: Parts of three strong Republican counties, Randolph, Davidson and Rowan, have been added to House District 8, strengthening the prospects of Republicans regaining their seat once held by GOP Congressman Hayes. Several reliably Democratic precincts in Mecklenburg County have been moved into Congressman Mel Watt’s U.S. House District 12, taking “about 37,000 African Americans away from Kissell,” reports the News & Observer/Charlotte Observer. Mecklenburg County had 17% of the district under the old map; only 5.5% under the new map. Cumberland County had 20% of the old district; none of the new district. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 9, currently held by Republican Congresswoman Myrick, did not undergo any change that will impact the likely outcome of congressional races for the next 10 years. It is still a GOP stronghold where Republican gubernatorial nominee McCrory, former mayor of Charlotte, won the district with 65% of the vote and would win again with 67% of the vote as it is newly configured.
Key County Changes: Myrick lost friendly precincts in Gaston County to Congressman McHenry. However, that loss is offset by a gain of GOP precincts in northern Mecklenburg County (Town of Davidson), southern Iredell County, and new precincts in northeastern Union County . Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 10, currently held by Republican Congressman Patrick McHenry, has about 5% fewer Republicans but continues as a GOP stronghold. President Obama would still lose to McCain here by 57% to 42% and Perdue would still lose to McCrory here by about that same margin.
Key County Changes: McHenry picks up all of Gaston County, his home county and solid Republican territory. He loses GOP strongholds Mitchell, Avery and Caldwell, as well as and Burke County, to Shuler’s district. McHenry picks up all of Polk County and the eastern side of Buncombe County, including Asheville. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 11, currently held by Democratic Congressman Heath Shuler, has now become a safe harbor for Republicans. The anchor for Democrats in this district has always been Buncombe County, particularly Asheville. Not only has half of Buncombe County, including Asheville, been put into Congressman McHenry’s safe Republican district, but several of the most Republican counties in the state have been moved from districts held by Congresswoman Foxx and Congressman McHenry to Heath Shuler’s district. Keep in mind, this district was held by Republican Congressman Charles Taylor for 12 years. It was already a leaning Republican district. Shuler, an exceptionally strong and attractive candidate, has been able to hang onto the seat because he is a great candidate and he votes like a Republican.
Key County Changes: Shular picks up Mitchell, Caldwell, Burke and Avery Counties. All but Burke County are reliably Republican counties. Avery and Mitchell counties are 2 of the 6 counties that voted for Herbert Hoover against Roosevelt in 1932. Now that’s Republican! He loses the eastern half of Buncombe County, including Asheville, and all of Polk County. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 12, currently held by Democratic Congressman Mel Watt, did not undergo any change that will impact the likely outcome of congressional races for the next 10 years. It is still a majority-minority district where Democrats have a 64% registration advantage over the meager 16% Republican registration. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
- U.S. House District 13 is currently held by Democratic Congressman Brad Miller. As expected, North Carolina Congressman Miller has been drawn into a district he cannot win. Turnabout is fair play. When he chaired the NC Senate reapportionment committee 10 years ago, he drew himself a congressional district he could not lose. Now he’s in a district he cannot win. Registered Democrats plummeted from 51% to 41% and Republicans increased their ranks from 26% to 37%. Under the current district, Obama received 59% to only 40% for McCain. Under the new map, McCain would beat Obama by 56% to 44%. Amazing! Perdue’s market share plummets under the new map from 57% to 45% while McCrory’s market share increases from 39% to 52%.
Key County Changes: Stokes and Surry counties, both reliably Republican in national elections, have been added to Miller’s district. Reliably Democratic precincts in Guilford County have been removed. Conservative “Reagan Democrats” precincts in northern Alamance, northern Orange and northern Durham counties have been added. Republican precincts in western Guilford County and eastern Forsyth County stay. Click here for counties in district and county % of district.
Surprises & Interesting Notes:
- All 13 incumbents still reside in their new districts (no double bunking).
- There is no third majority-minority district as many had speculated.
- Despite the Republican-friendly change in the rematch in of the congressional districts, one Democrat, North Carolina Atty. Gen. Roy Cooper, would still carry all of them.
- The basis of the new map is the old map. At a glance, they look very similar.
- The changes in the maps are as politically significant as they are subtle; illustrating the extraordinary sophistication of today’s remapping technology.
- Republicans drew the districts with growth projections in mind to ensure that they will be safe all the way to the end of the decade.
Knowing early how campaigns are likely to end takes the uncertainty out of politics, thereby saving you a lot of your time and your money. That’s what the John Davis Political Report is all about.
– END –
The ½ price July 4th sale will continue throughout the month. If you are not a subscriber, Click HERE to Print Subscription Reply Form, or subscribe online to the John Davis Political Report at www.johndavisconsulting.com/subscribe.
Need a speaker on redistricting? Contact me at www.johndavisconsulting.com/speaker-info
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