Sunday, 8 May 2016

Is Hillary a sure thing for the White House?

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In a US election that has ripped up, chewed through and spat out conventional wisdom, Hillary Clinton is still favorite to beat Donald Trump in November.
Few analysts or journalists predicted that Trump would last long in a tough Republican race, much less win it.
But here is why Clinton is still odds-on favorite to become the first female president, along with a few reasons why a dose of caution might be warranted.
- The numbers -
At the starting gate, a CNN/ORC poll has Clinton leading Trump 54-41. For months, head-to-head surveys have found a similar result.
That is a monumental lead in a country almost evenly split between Democrats and Republicans. But it is also borderline irrelevant.
The November 8 vote is six months away, light years in US electoral politics.
And US elections are won by carrying individual states, not the popular vote, as Al Gore found to his cost in 2000.
Still, the polls contain harbingers of doom for Trump, particularly in a sliver of data that politicos refer to as "unfavorables."About 65 percent of voters have a negative impression of Trump, according to an average of polls by Real Clear Politics.
Given he has been in the public eye for years, he is widely known and minds could be difficult to shift.
Yet "The Donald" has shown he does not play by conventional election rules.
He has already branded his rival "Crooked Hillary" and is certain to stir up memories of Bill Clinton's marital infidelity.
Clinton who is herself seen negatively by 55 percent of voters -- a large number, but not quite as catastrophic as Trump's -- has the upper hand, but will have to find the right tone to parry attacks.
Trump's rivals learned the hard way that getting in the mud with him rarely pays off, but taking the high road might look detached or meek.
- The electorate -
The long trend of America becoming less white means Trump, with his pseudo-nativist message, is also waging a campaign against demographics.
In the 2012 election, 93 percent of African-Americans, 71 percent of Hispanics and 73 percent of Asians voted for Barack Obama.
That was enough for the Democrat to win the election, even though he only got 39 percent of white voters, the biggest voting group.
Trump -- thanks to talk of building a border wall, Mexican "rapists" and deporting the country's estimated 11 million illegal immigrants -- is doing even worse among Hispanic voters than the last Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
His approval ratings among Hispanic voters currently stand at 12 percent.
That's bad news for Trump's chances in Colorado, Florida, Nevada, New Mexico and maybe even Arizona. To add to Trump's misery, his standing among women voters is derisory.
Almost half of Republican women say they can't see themselves voting for him.
"Trump has alienated growing demographic groups such as Hispanics, and he is at toxic levels with women and young people," said Larry Sabato, who heads the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
If he can't reach working and college educated women, then even blue collar states like Pennsylvania may remain out of reach.
Trump hopes to change the calculus by getting more white voters to turn out.
"He needs to excite the middle and working class white who doesn't usually vote," said Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
Sabato was skeptical.
"There aren't millions of blue collar whites who don't usually vote Republican just waiting to show up for Trump. Where's the evidence for this breathtaking proposition?"
- The Map -
The most important number in US politics is 270, the number of electoral college votes -- out of a total of 538 -- needed to win the presidency.
Of the 51 state and regional contests, most are winner-take-all. But not all are equal.
California is worth 55 votes, while Vermont is worth three.
In 2008 and 2012, Obama broke 300.The last Republican president George W. Bush squeaked by with 271 and 286.
Trump may target states in the Rust Belt and New England, and battlegrounds like Florida and Ohio, but he faces the prospect of having to flip several states to the Republican column just to be competitive.
- The campaigns -
The businessman will have to try to do all this without the unified support of the Republican party.
AFP

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