Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
In that race, the R was Robin Ficker, who was about the worst possible candidate they could put up.
Yeah, and back in 2018 this board was full of posts of people claiming they were lifelong D but were voting for Ficker. Ficker got 16%, Floreen 19%, and Elrich 65%. Do the math, even if every Floreen voter (prob a combo of D and R voters) decided to vote for Sullivan, Elrich still wins by 30 pts. My guess is a number of Floreen voters are either going to vote for Elrich or not vote at all. My prediction is Elrich 70%, Sullivan 30%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
This. This is a permanently deep blue county. Not going to change anytime soon.
Voters are incredibly entrenched in their identity as ‘Democrats’. I hear it in talking to my neighbors. They hate the Democrat policies and candidates but just cannot and will not ever vote for a Republican.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
In that race, the R was Robin Ficker, who was about the worst possible candidate they could put up.
Yeah, and back in 2018 this board was full of posts of people claiming they were lifelong D but were voting for Ficker. Ficker got 16%, Floreen 19%, and Elrich 65%. Do the math, even if every Floreen voter (prob a combo of D and R voters) decided to vote for Sullivan, Elrich still wins by 30 pts. My guess is a number of Floreen voters are either going to vote for Elrich or not vote at all. My prediction is Elrich 70%, Sullivan 30%.
Anonymous wrote:No Democrat uses the term "leftists" nice try.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
In that race, the R was Robin Ficker, who was about the worst possible candidate they could put up.
Yeah, and back in 2018 this board was full of posts of people claiming they were lifelong D but were voting for Ficker. Ficker got 16%, Floreen 19%, and Elrich 65%. Do the math, even if every Floreen voter (prob a combo of D and R voters) decided to vote for Sullivan, Elrich still wins by 30 pts. My guess is a number of Floreen voters are either going to vote for Elrich or not vote at all. My prediction is Elrich 70%, Sullivan 30%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
In that race, the R was Robin Ficker, who was about the worst possible candidate they could put up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not voting for any Republicans. I used to, but after the Capitol riot and Roe v. Wade, not crossing the aisle anymore.
But you were okay with Antifa and its violent garbage. GFY!
Anonymous wrote:Nope, not voting for any Republicans. I used to, but after the Capitol riot and Roe v. Wade, not crossing the aisle anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MoCo is roughly 62% Dem, 15% Republican, and 24% independent (no party affiliation) based on Sept 2022 data. Let's say Sully got all the Republican and Ind votes. That puts him at 39%. He needs another 11%, which would be about 18% of Dems to vote for him.
In the primary, Elrich got 39% of the Dem vote, Blair got 39% of the Dem vote, and Reimer got 20% of the Dem vote.
So.. would at least 30% of Blair voters decide to vote for Sully? It's possible. A lot of Blair voters were vehemently anti-Elrich. Then that's not even looking at what Riemer supporters would do.
Of course, I'm still making a lot of assumptions, a big one being the Independents will go for Sully, and also that we'll see even turnout among those 3 party groups. It's still a bit of a long shot for Sully, but it's not impossible either.
This might be a compelling argument if it weren't for the evidence from 2018, when Floreen ran as an independent. Elrich still got 60% of the vote. The percentage of Dems who would actually switch votes (even for an independent) are miniscule, the number who would vote R are even smaller.