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In Florida, Endangered Democrats Will Approach Extinction Status on Election Day

November 1, 2010 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Like a gun to their head.

After Tuesday night, Florida panthers will be less endangered than elected Democrats in the state.

Nate Silvers is the nation’s best forecaster of election results. He’s not a pollster but a mathematician. He worked as a baseball statistician for several years, then started forecasting elections, first at Daily Kos, then at his own website, FiveThirtyEight, where he predicted the 2008 election better than any pollster. Earlier this year the New York Times snagged him.

Silvers calculates results based on data and pollsters’ quality. His latest results for tomorrow’s elections aren’t likely to change. It’s a cliche by now to predict a bloodbath for Democrats, though the extent of the bloodletting is what will be striking.

Democrats’ majority of 257 to 178 after the 2008 election will flop to a Republican majority of somewhere in the range of 232 to 202, a loss of at least 55 seats for Democrats. Silvers is still predicting that Democrats will hold on to the Senate by one or two seats (Marco Rubio’s projected victory won’t be a Republican pick-up). But Democrats’ 29-21 advantage in governorships after the 2008 election will more than reverse, with Republicans taking a 30 to 19 advantage. One Independent (Lincoln Chafee, the former Republican) is set to win Rhode Island.

Here are Silvers’ predictions for local races:

In the Florida Governor’s race, Alex Sink, the Democrat, is still projected to have a 53.2 percent chance of beating Rick Scott. It’ll be an extremely tight election regardless, one of the closest of the evening. Sink is projected to win 49 percent of the vote to Scott’s 48. This could be one of Silvers’ errors: Florida’s fractured and still temperamental electoral system (rather than Florida voters) always holds back 1 to 2 percent for the strangely unpredictable–enough to throw close races into chaos. Real Clear Politics’ poll average has Scott up by 1.7 percent. It’s just as possible that the vote will be too close to call or lead to a recount. That inconclusive result won’t have immediate national ramifications, but it’ll add to the ramifications for 2012: the more governorships Republicans control, the more they’ll sway the results of congressional and legislative redistricting ahead of the 2012 elections.

The U.S. Senate race is over: Marco Rubio won’t get a majority, but he’ll get a plurality of the vote (around 45 percent), to Charlie Crist’s 32 percent and Kendrick Meek’s 22 percent. Silvers gives Rubio a 93.3 percent chance of winning. No chance of losing that one.

In House races:

Nine-term Congressman John Mica will become 10-term Congressman John Mica. The standard-issue Republican, in office since 1992 (when Bill Clinton was elected, and two years before the boys and girls of the Contract on America took over Congress), is given a 99 percent chance of defeating Democrat Heather Beaven, who’ll get 33 percent of the vote to Mica’s 64 percent.

Democrat Suzanne Kosmas, who took the 24th Congressional District from the corrupt Tom Feeney two years ago with 57 percent of the vote, will be losing her seat to Republican Sandy Adams, who’s projected to win with 53 percent of the vote. Adams has an 81.4 percent chance of winning. That’s one of the big GOP pick-ups of the night, and one deserved: Kosmas never led with the strength of her convictions so much as by looking for every possible fence to straddle.

And Alan Grayson in the 8th District? There goes another one-term Democrat. Grayson beat Rick Keller with 52 percent of the vote. He’s likely to lose to Daniel Webster by the same number.

Democrat Corinne Brown will hold on to her 3rd District seat in north-central Florida, but that’s not saying much: Brown is not one of the more stellar members of Congress. She’s black in a minority-majority district (that is, a district drawn purposefully to take in as many blacks as possible, essentially segregating their voice to that one district). Brown would never survive as an elected congresswoman in a less gerrymandered district.

Silvers doesn’t make predictions for state legislative races, but we can: Republican Bill Proctor, once a contemporary of Herbert Hoover, will beat Democrat Doug Courtney.

Nationally, Republicans look set to defeat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in Nevada, Russ Feingold (the only remaining liberal) in Wisconsin, and take seats in Indiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Illinois, Arkansas and North Dakota held by Democrats.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. emile says

    November 1, 2010 at 9:15 am

    I wait with bated breath to see if the Republicans can do any better. But I’m worried that unless the two parties lay down their swords and actually start working together nothing will get done.

    The culture of negativity goes both ways, and politics is now a game of “I win, you lose!”

  2. lawabidingcitizen says

    November 1, 2010 at 9:50 am

    emile, more needs undoing than needs doing.

  3. P.C. 94 says

    November 1, 2010 at 11:35 am

    The surprise race will be Heather Beaven!

  4. Kip Durocher says

    November 1, 2010 at 12:12 pm

    Once again lawabiding, are we sure since of this as we can’t run a background check, not only misses the nail but plops the hammer down on the entirely wrong piece of wood.
    Misguided, lack of conviction, scared, lame, mentally lost=lawabidingcitizen.

  5. Big Apple says

    November 1, 2010 at 1:41 pm

    Surprise race, Heather Beaven?

    I am not a supporter of John Mica. However, even I can see that he will be a Congressman until he decides to quit.

    Don’t believe for one minute that the all of St John’s, and Flagler and parts of Seminole, Putnam and Volusia county republicans are going to vote democratic, no matter how qualified the opposition. It just won’t happen. They think John Mica walks on water in his spare time.

    I read somewhere that John Mica is the best Congressman that money has bought.

  6. Alex says

    November 1, 2010 at 7:44 pm

    A Republican sweep now, will assure President Obama to be a two term president.

    The Republicans told us, they know how to fix the economy and create jobs.

    Will they finish with the job by January 1st, 2011? or they just lied to us?

  7. Terri says

    November 1, 2010 at 9:51 pm

    To those who stole all the Democratic political signs around Flagler county, you may win seeing as some have a problem remembering who dug this huge hole we are in, but I pray people are smart enough in 2 years to realize you all having nothing more to offer but the same selfish one sided government as we had when this embassing state allowed that fool to be appointed not voted in as president. Hold your breath country your about to allow us to continue to keep sliding straight into a bottomless pit! Congrats!

  8. John says

    November 1, 2010 at 11:41 pm

    Yeah, don’t forget the people who got us into this mess…that would be the Democratic controlled Congress..

  9. starfyre says

    November 2, 2010 at 3:41 am

    i voted for obama—i need his healthcare and welfare system badly

  10. some guy says

    November 2, 2010 at 12:03 pm

    Alex how great would that be if they could fix the economy before they are even seated in mid january 2011

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